About Me

Name: conservative woman
Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Archives

Blog Roll

 

Blurring the Lines: Libs Do Not Know their Enemy

Imagine that you’re a Christian high school student participating in a mock terrorist exercise in your school and you’re told that the faux terrorists belonged to a group called “the New Crusaders” and that they were holding everyone hostage because the daughter of a group member was expelled for “praying before class.”


They were “seeking justice” so you’re told.


While Burlington Township High denied that the mock attack was aimed at making Christian students feel uncomfortable, and that they weren’t referring to Christians as terrorists, let’s be real here. No Buddhists, Muslims, Jews, Shinto’s, Hindus, Wiccans or any other world religion has ever been referred to as “Crusaders.” And for the most part, it’s been Christian kids who have had to deal with the 11th Commandment of the United States: thou shalt not pray openly in school.


It seems some Americans are clueless as to who the enemy is these days. Maybe if Burlington Township had consulted Lt. Col. Dave Grossman, president of Killology Research Group (an anti-terrorism consultancy that trains FBI and other law enforcement) they would have selected a different group for their protagonists:


“Floor plans for schools in Virginia, Texas and New Jersey have been recovered from terrorist hands in Iraq…Islamic terrorists are already in place in the United States and yes, that includes [school] bus drivers, cafeteria workers…”


According to Grossman, videotapes were also confiscated in Afghanistan showing Al-Qaida terrorists practicing for the take-over of a school.


But instead the wicked ones were called “New Crusaders.”


Blurring the lines between what is and is not a terrorist group has become the favorite pass time of liberal ideologues. For years there’s been an attempt to point the finger at Christians and declare us a dangerous group of radicals. Supposedly we wanted to stone adulterous women, among other things. Oddly enough, the one book that defines the faith of genuine Christians has Christ forgiving an adulterous woman. Go figure.


Since the attacks of 9-11, and in particular the re-election of George Bush, who is a born-again Christian (though not necessarily a conservative one) it’s been the mantra of the irreligious left to refer to our President as a “terrorist” and Christians as terrorists as well.


Tossed into the mix of “Christian terrorists” are the likes of Timothy McVeigh (Oklahoma City bombing); various anti-abortion bombers/shooters; the KKK; Olympic bomber Eric Rudolph; etc.

Representatives of the irreligious left are quick to use the above incidents as a means to criticize our national security programs:


“We may hear quite a lot about the government’s fight against Muslim terrorists, but what about Christian terrorists? There was a time that three of the FBI’s top ten most wanted criminals were anti-abortion terrorists- Christians one and all, committing acts of terrorism in an effort to promote their religious beliefs. Why have they dropped off the radar?”


Why indeed. Answer: most are in prison or have had the death penalty enacted on them.


Sure, they have their groupies. The Army of God is still hanging out but is “underground” according to the MIPT anti-terrorism website. Michael Bray, who is considered the “Pastor” of the group, served prison time for clinic bombings. He’s also written some “how to” commit violence against abortion clinic books, which appeal NOT to the New Testament, but to Old Testament passages. The eye-for-an-eye stuff. Not the “love your enemies” stuff.


Army of God has a few boys in detention: Richard Rudolph, James Kopp, and Clayton Waagner are all doing time for their crimes. The last attack attributed to them was 1998, which could explain why they’re not on the terrorist watch list: they’ve been mouthing off, but as any good liberal will tell you, free speech means you can say some pretty distasteful things, even make threats, so long as said threats fall within the law, like, oh, I don’t know…. DEATH TO AMERICA?


KNOW YOUR ENEMY
The United States didn’t just come under attack from Islamists on September 11, 2001. We have been the target of Islamists for decades. It merely solidified, with a huge bang, on that beautiful September morning.

Unfortunately, in trying to blur the lines, liberals would rather point in the wrong direction than deal with an uncomfortable truth: we are being judged by the Islamic world, not because we’re a super power with a military and bombs, but for “moral” reasons. The Islamists have been judging America since the visit of Sayyed Qutb in the 1940’s. And the war, they’ve said, has been our representative super power waging war on pious Islam. We, the Americans, they reason, have been trying to destroy moral Islam bit by bit by bit.


It’s a shame that liberals cannot see this. If they did, the anti-abortion radicals would pale in comparison and the ACLU and People for the American Way wouldn’t be so distressed by Mel Gibson as they should be by an Ahmadinejad.


Instead, liberals (and in particular atheists) point to vignettes and try to scare the bee-jeebers out of people with stories that aren’t exactly accurate.


Like the story about a library that had to cancel a summer program for kids which involved occult teachings: “LUNATIC BAPTISTS SHUT DOWN SUMMER LIBRARY PROGRAM” the header reads. Supposedly there were “threats of violence” and the bunny trail led back to a Baptist Church and included emails and a single phone call.


But an article at the American Library Association website revealed the facts. “Going to get you” was a threat to PICKET THE LIBRARY. Not bomb it. And the library decided to cancel because they didn’t want to ask children to cross a picket line. “Having children walk through pickets was just horrible, so from that perspective, we decided we would just cancel…”


Before you go ballistic about how unfair that is to children, remember: public libraries are paid for with public dollars. Tax payer bucks. Any tax paying citizen has the right to peaceful protest of a public facility. Period.


In a speech he delivered at Yale in 1962, President John F. Kennedy said:


“The great enemy of the truth is very often not the lie — deliberate, contrived and dishonest — but the myth — persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic.”


The myth that Christians are a danger to people’s lives in this country, in particular pro-life Christians or those who oppose things like gay marriage, etc., is not only unrealistic, it’s also dangerous. If the same criteria is applied to the loopy left it makes for an interesting collective.


THE DANGEROUS LOOPY LEFTISTS

It seems the liberal criteria for what does and does not constitute a terrorist group involves whether or not it’s their pet group. Anti-abortion people are obviously terrorists, not because they’re trying to attack America, but because they’re opposing (in a bad way) the loopy leftist love of abortion.


Suppose that same criteria were applied to leftist groups? Below is my list of possible terrorist groups the FBI should add to the list.


ELF.
No, not the cute little guy in a green suit! This is the Earth Liberation Front. They’re not on the terrorist watch list, are they? Nope. But they have had some problems here in the U.S. and abroad. In 2006, there were 11 indictments handed down against ELF (Earth Liberation Front) and ALF (Animal Liberation Front) members.


Jerry Vlasak, has been arrested several times for his pro-critter activities. One would think a man who favors treating animals ethically and kindly would likewise do so with the human animal, right? Not so:


“It won't ruin our movement if someone gets killed in an animal rights action. It's going to happen sooner or later. The Animal Liberation Front, the Earth Liberation Front -- sooner or later there's going to be someone getting hurt. And we have to accept that fact. It's going to happen. It's not going to hurt our movement. Our movement will go on. And it's important that we not let the bully pulpit of the FBI and the other oppression agencies stop us from what we're doing. They are the violent ones. They are the terrorists ... we have to keep doing what we're doing.”


In 2003 Vlasak had this to say concerning doctors who use animal research in their practice:


"I don't think you'd have to kill -- assassinate -- too many ... I think for 5 lives, 10 lives, 15 human lives, we could save a million, 2 million, 10 million non-human lives."


Did I mention that Vlasak was a member of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine? Um yeah. That’s responsible medicine, doc.


And did I mention that most eco-animal rights groups try not to harm humans? Kind of like most pro-life groups don’t endorse shooting abortion doctors?


ADL.
Yes, the Anti-Defamation League. The ADL was founded and formed to “protect Jewish people by whatever means possible” and on the JDL website, there’s an admission that it’s founder, Rabbi Kahane, was um, well, a little off his matzos. In any case, the 2001 attempt by ADL chief, Irving David, makes it plain that the ADL still has some violent roots, right? After all, they were planning to blow up a mosque and the offices of U.S. Representative (a American from Lebanon) Darrell Issa. Some of the phrases picked up in the wire-tapping were things like: “blow up the entire building” and “Arabs need a wake-up call.”


And the ADL worried about Mel Gibson?

 

ATHEISTS & AGNOSTICS. Come on guys. If you can point to the Crusades, can’t we point to atheism and agnosticism as possible problems, too? Stalin, Lenin, Castro. Tung and Marx were all atheist. We also have Jeffrey Dahmer who was an ATHEIST at the time he dined on unsuspecting gays. Later he would convert to Christianity.


And while we’re at it, what about Timothy McVeigh? Atheist Dan Barker tried to claim that McVeigh was a Christian in his article: Christian Terrorism in Oklahoma City.


According to an article in the Guardian, UK, McVeigh’s own words deny any link to Christianity:


In his letter, McVeigh said he was an agnostic but that he would ‘improvise, adapt and overcome‘, if it turned out there was an afterlife. ‘If I'm going to hell,’ he wrote, ‘I'm gonna have a lot of company.’ His body is to be cremated and his ashes scattered in a secret location.”


In his book, American Terrorist: Timothy McVeigh and the Oklahoma City Bombing, Lou Michael records hours of interview with McVeigh. In a CNN interview, Michael recounts:


“McVeigh is agnostic. He doesn't believe in God, but he won't rule out the possibility. I asked him, ‘What if there is a heaven and hell?’


He said that once he crosses over the line from life to death, if there is something on the other side, he will -- and this is using his military jargon – ‘adapt, improvise, and overcome.’ Death to him is all part of the adventure.”


McVeigh explained, in his own letter, why he bombed the Murrah building. And it had nothing to do with Christ, Christianity, or any moral stance involving issues near and dear to Christians.


"I chose to bomb a federal building because such an action served more purposes than other options. Foremost the bombing was a retaliatory strike; a counter attack for the cumulative raids (and subsequent violence and damage) that federal agents had participated in over the preceding years (including, but not limited to, Waco). From the formation of such units as the FBI's Hostage Rescue and other assault teams amongst federal agencies during the 80s, culminating in the Waco incident, federal actions grew increasingly militaristic and violent, to the point where at Waco, our government - like the Chinese - was deploying tanks against its own citizens.”


In an event that killed men, women and children, committed by the first American terrorist of the 21st century, it’s interesting that this would be an agnostic. McVeigh claimed, as do many agnostic, that science is his religion.


RECENT CHRISTIAN FAUX PAS

Christians don’t make very good bombers and such. Not like McVeigh and definitely not like the 19 Islamic terrorists of 9-11 fame. Recent “terrorist” actions by Christians include David Robert McMenemy’s messed up attempt at ramming his car into an abortion clinic (2006).

As the bungler sits in prison (where he should be) on charges of second degree arson (he soaked his car in gas and rammed it into the clinic). Not only was it NOT an abortion clinic (seems McMenemy wasn’t the brightest bulb in the pack for more reasons than one), the clinic was empty and McMenemy walked out of the mess, admitting he did it. The sprinkler system prevented the health clinic from being completely destroyed and no lives were lost.


Is this any different from an animal rights activist group blowing up a research lab?


Yet we have classic liberal hyperbole applied here:


“On Sept. 11, 2006, the fifth anniversary of the terror attacks that devastated our nation, a man crashed his car into a building in Davenport, Iowa, hoping to blow it up and kill himself in the fire.”


Huh? A ten year old car slamming into an empty building by a man with a known history of mental instability, a man who obviously had the planning skills of an apricot, is being compared to the 9-11 hijackers?


Not that his actions weren’t wrong. Just as it’s wrong when animal rights and eco-activists do their stunts. But let’s be real here, this just simply is NOT the same as 9-11 and while I would never suggest that police write off these incidents as being unimportant, I certainly have much more concern about people who plan to blow up airports and military bases than a guy who can’t even manage to off himself.


And then there’s Max Blumenthal’s article about the Falwell funeral at the Huffington Post. Blumenthal points to Mark Uhl, a Liberty University student who toted what amounted to a useless puff bomb in his car. Apparently Uhl told someone about it, and that someone alerted authorities. He mentions that a group had planned to protest the Falwell funeral and that Uhl made the bomb to deter the protestors. Reading from Uhl’s (now closed off) blog, Blumenthal quotes:


"Christians, we have been given life after death and we should help others receive it and not sit here in our big buildings and sing to ourselves so we can go home and feel good about ourselves…Christians, fear of death, fear of death. The fear of death shows you don't believe…

God needs soldiers to fight so his children may live free. Are you afraid??? I'm not. SEND ME!!! "


Blumenthal draws a parallel between this and Osama bin Laden:


“Uhl's imploration sounds eerily like the battle-cries of another, more notorious religious radical: Osama bin-Laden. Consider what bin-Laden
told the Independent in 1993. `I was never afraid of death... As Muslims, we believe that when we die, we go to heaven. Before a battle, God sends us... Tranquility.’"


If a belief in life after death, heaven, Svarga, Paradise, Nirvana, whatever you want to call it, and no fear of the reaper qualifies one for the nuthouse or, at least, a terrorist list, then shoot, even orthodox Jews qualify, Mr. Blumenthal.


Blumenthal also got the motive wrong:


“Uhl was an a devout evangelical Christian who advocated religious violence in the name of American nationalism.”


I will about bet that as time passes, if the media cares to cover it, we’ll find out this was a case of a young man who was given a scholarship to Liberty University and felt some personal allegiance to the memory of a man he admired, even if he didn’t handle the problem in a manner consistent with Falwell’s teachings.


Blumenthal also left out that while the bomb would have done some damage, it was a slowburn bomb which, according to authorities, would not have been very destructive. The 19-year-old now sits in prison, where he belongs of course. In the meantime, there are Islamic terrorist cells here in the United States and abroad which are planning attacks on us.


But then, we have those who cannot tell the enemy from the anomaly. On tompaine.com, an article about the Falwell funeral states:


“Stop it. Stop it right now. Stop pretending Islamists- or environmentalists or animal right activists are the only immanent terrorist threats to our nation. We now know that the students at Liberty University were ready to use homemade bombs against protestors at Jerry Falwell’s funeral.”


Blumenthal was at least honest enough to point out that the protestors were members of the Westboro Baptist Church of “God Hates Fags” fame. Why were they going there? They didn’t like some of the things Falwell said, did not say, things he did, did not do, well just about everything. Below are snippets from their website:


“Falwell cut a deal with his f a g preacher bud, Mel White On Oct. 24, 1999, at his Thomas Road Church, Lynchburg, Va., Jerry Fraudwell denounced WBC Pastor Fred Phelps for preaching truth to f a g s, to the delight of f a g preacher Mel White…”


“God Hates F a gs! And F a g-Enablers! Ergo God hates Jerry Falwell, Billy Graham, Pat Robertson, and all sick Armenian heretic preachers…”


Are you getting the impression that these people are wrapped a little too tight?


Again, nobody approves of using violence to inhibit protest. On the other side, the kid bungled it and the bomb wouldn’t have even caused any real damage other than to maybe make the people from WBB think they’d had a collective fart.


THE ENEMY MAY BE LIBERALISM?

“Fascist, racist, anti-abortion groups are responsible for really all the terrorist attacks in the United States- with the exception of September 11, 2001- over the past two decades.”

                                                                                                                 -Patrick Martin

                                                                                        World Socialist Website, 2005


Martin’s words ring hollow as they ignore the past 20 years of activism by environmentalists, animal rights groups, and other religious groups who have done things in the name of their belief or cause. He also seems to forget that an attack IN the United States need not be the criteria for a threat against the American people. Attacks ON the American people- or the people of America- by Islamists have spanned decades, beginning with the assassination of Robert Kennedy- a hero of the left- by Sirhan Sirhan in 1968.


The list of attacks against Americans by Islamists clearly shows who the real enemy terrorists are:


1983- Bombing of the Marine Corps barracks in Beirut, Lebanon (twice that year.)

1984- Kuwait Airlines hijacking, Americans murdered.

1985- Madrid restaurant bombed, American servicemen killed.

1985- TWA flight hijacked, Navy sailor murdered and his body dumped on the tarmac.

1988- Lockerbie, Scotland. Pan Am 747 hijacked and passengers killed including 189 Americans.

1988- Berlin Disco bombing- disco was full of American military on R&R.

1992- hotel housing U.S. servicemen bombed.

1993- Attempted assassination of President George Bush, Sr.

1993- First World Trade Center bombing attempt, 7 killed, over 1,000 injured.

1995- Attack on U.S. Diplomats in Pakistan.

1995- Attack on U.S. military installation in Saudi Arabia.

1996- Khobar Towers attack, 19 U.S. military killed, over 200 injured.

1997- Palestinian gunman fires on tourists on top of the Empire State Building.

1998- Peruvian Embassy bombing.

1998- U.S. Embassy in Kenya blown up- hundreds murdered- terrorists also hit 
           Embassies in Nairobi and Tanzania. Americans injured and killed.

2000- Americans kidnapped in Uzbekistan.

2000- Attack on the U.S.S Cole, 17 killed, 39 injured.

2001- WTC, Pentagon come under attack; over 3000 Americans murdered.

2002- Teenager flies his plane into a building, he left behind a suicide note proclaiming his

           admiration for Osama bin Laden.

2002- D.C. Sniper- Nation of Islam convert kills multiple persons in different places around

          the metro area and on the east coast.

2002- Two American women killed in a grenade attack on a church in Pakistan.

2002- LAX attack.

2002- Marines attacked and murdered in Kuwait.

2002- Jordan. American diplomat shot while in his car by Al-Qaida.

2002- Yemen. Islamic gunman poses as a father carrying his child, kills three American

           humanitarian workers at a missionary hospital.


The list piles longer and longer. And with the recent attempts aimed at Kennedy International Airport and Fort Dix, to say that Christians or any other anomaly group poses a danger more than - or equal to that - of Islamists is to deny reality.


Liberals seem bent on retaining their Cleopatra Syndrome and remaining the “Queens of Denial.” But at what expense? While they (and I include ardent atheists in the mix) want to point to Christians as the enemy, they’re missing the real enemy in their midst.


Someone once said “he that's liberal to all alike, may do a good by chance, but never out of judgment.”

It’s time liberals, regardless of party affiliation, religion, irreligion, race or gender, need to stop trying to do good by chance and exercise better judgment. Not for the Christian’s sake, but for the sake of our nation. Blurring the lines so as to hide who is the real enemy puts all at risk.





Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

God's Warriors?

The segment opens with Amanpour stating that hers was the last interview granted by Rev. Jerry Falwell prior to his recent death.

Actually, it was one week prior to his untimely and unexpected death.

I’m not surprised that Falwell is her opening. For a long time now the liberal media has vilified Falwell, placing him on a pedestal he never claimed nor wanted. Amanpour tries- valiantly tries- to behave herself and not come across as being “anti-Jerry”. But there are little twists which make one wonder about her objectivity.

For example, when she addresses the issue of abortion with Falwell. In the segment, Amanpour claims that Falwell believed America “deserved” what happened on 9-11. Is that what he said? Falwell denies it:

“I said the people that are responsible must take the blame for [911]”.

This actually comes from a telecast from CBN, an interview with Pat Robertson and Falwell wherein Falwell accurately points out that there have been no foreign attacks on mainland America since 1812, something he attributes to God having protected our country all this time.

What did Falwell say?

“And, I know that I'll hear from them for this. But, throwing God out successfully with the help of the federal court system, throwing God out of the public square, out of the schools. The abortionists have got to bear some burden for this because God will not be mocked. And when we destroy 40 million little innocent babies, we make God mad. I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians who are actively trying to make that an alternative lifestyle, the ACLU, People For the American Way - all of them who have tried to secularize America - I point the finger in their face and say ‘you helped this happen.’”

Is it so far-fetched to believe that God would remove his protection from our country? Is it wrong to tell groups that support NAMBLA (North American Man-Boy Love Association); groups that call the termination of an unborn baby’s life a “right”; and groups that have tried to take God out of society entirely; that God might be a little pissed at them and the rest of us for letting it happen? Is it wrong to tell those groups that they may well have gotten on God’s bad side?

Argue as you like, we can go back to Babel times, when mankind was scattered. We can go back to Noah, and the world and nearly all of it’s inhabitants were destroyed because of their sinfulness. And we can go back to Sodom and Gomorrah, when two villages were annihilated because their “society” offended God.

Biblically speaking, Falwell wasn’t off in his assessment. But he did apologize for “upsetting” people later on.

I don’t think Al Queda has done that, has it?

The segment then floats along happily to the topic of abortion clinic bombings, shootings, etc.

“Radical opponents” Amanpour says, “had long waged their holy war” against abortion clinics. “Bombings, arson, assassination that frightened many women.”

I wasn’t frightened. Nobody I knew was frightened. Yes, pro-abortion women were frightened (funny, she only says women were frightened). Cited were two cases, the 1994 Pensacola incident and an incident in 1997. I’m not terribly surprised that Amanpour barely touched on this issue. There’s a reason: most of the arrests involving pro-lifers have to do with arrests of peaceful protestors.

According to religioustolerance.com, between 1989 and 2004, there were 24 reported murders/attempted murders and 154 bombings/attempted bombings. Compare that to over 12,000 arrests at blockades in 1989 alone (the arrests were made, not because they participants were violent, but because the participants were there).

Laws allowing picketing within a certain parameter have lessened the number blockade arrests. In fact, from 2000 to 2004, there were NO blockade arrests.

In general, the incidents resulting in deaths were minimal. And, in general, these actions were condemned by most pro-life leaders. Interestingly enough, it was who was not interviewed for the segment on abortion that makes one wonder if Amanpour was trying to paint a slant linking the few radicals to the many pro-lifers who, like Falwell and myself, seek judicial and legal social change.

Neither did Amanpour mention the Liberty Godparent Foundation which provides support for unwed mothers. Putting money where one’s pro-life mouth is apparently didn’t impress Amanpour. Or maybe it was more convenient to try and link Falwell to things he was NOT involved in rather than mention the good things he has done?

SOUTHERN BAPTIST RADICALS
I have to say I was surprised to see Christian women, in particular Evangelical Christian women, compared to women who are forced into wearing the hijjab in places like Iran. Especially when that comparison included the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest protestant organization in the United States.

I was also surprised that Amanpour’s expert on doctrine was Jimmy Carter. Not that he isn’t a Christian. Not that he isn’t born again. But he let her slide on something that atheists have misrepresented about Christian women for decades: women’s rights in the modern world of Christianity.

There’s always new things to be learned and I was amazed to find out that the Southern Baptist Convention was hijacked away from Jimmy Carter. I didn’t even know he had been a delegate let alone a member of the governing body.

In any event, the criticisms of this “fanatical” group was that a) they voted (a vote which included female representatives from member congregations) that women could not be pastors; 2) that women could not teach men; and 3) that women should be submissive to their husbands.

Say what?

As far as I know, and I have been Southern Baptist since 1987, the SBC has never voted on whether or not women could teach men. Nor have they voted on women being submissive to their husbands. What they DID vote to accept are the cannon of scripture known as the New Testament as the Word of God.
Gee, imagine doing such a radical thing!

What does the SBC believe about the role of women?

“A wife is to submit herself graciously to the servant leadership of her husband even as the church willingly submits to the headship of Christ. She, being in the image of God as is her husband and thus equal to him, has the God-given responsibility to respect her husband and to serve as his helper in managing the household and nurturing the next generation.”

This isn’t talking about forced submission as spoken of in Islam wherein a husband can make demands on his wife or punish her if she “rebels” (Sura 4:34). But in case you think the husband has no obligations:

“The husband and wife are of equal worth before God, since both are created in God's image. The marriage relationship models the way God relates to His people. A husband is to love his wife as Christ loved the church.”

Both of these statements come from scripture. And in case you’re wondering: Christ loved the church sacrificially- even to giving up His life for what would later become the Church or body of believers.

In other words: we wives are only to obey our husbands as they are obedient to God. If they go outside of that parameter, we don’t have to follow. And it’s a willful act. Husbands have to love their wives no matter what! So who has it tough here?

SOCIAL DROP-OUTS and HOME SCHOOLERS
Having grown up in the 60’s and 70’s I knew what social drop-outs were about. They were stoned most of the time, wore funky clothing, strange hair-do’s and generally acted like they had impulse control disorder.

So when Amanpour introduced the next segment about homeschooler drop-outs, I really expected to see some commune-like back woodsy family, barefooted, out in the middle of Podunk nowhere, tending chickens and maybe a little polygamous.

Instead the Navarr’s live in a nice home in suburbia. I would kill (pardon the use of the word) for her kitchen! And with their five children, all neatly dressed and still very normal acting, I was surprised that Amanpour labeled them as societal drop-outs merely because they opted to home-school.
Then again, Amanpour didn’t want to go into the home-schooling data, which shows that the choice to home-school isn’t always about religion. She would have noted that home-schooling, while it began as an “alternative” education, is now legal in all 50 States.

Writing for BOSTONIA, the Alumni Quarterly of Boston University, Cynthia Buccini noted:
“Parents choose to homeschool for academic, family, and religious reasons: they object to what the schools teach, they believe they can give their children a better education at home, or they think regular schools offer a poor learning environment or fail to challenge their kids.”

A Wikipedia article notes that home schooling isn’t only an American phenomenon. It’s worldwide. And while noting that most home schooling in the U.S. involves Evangelical Christians, homeschoolers…

“…run the gamut from politically left
to right, from deeply religious to agnostic or atheist.

Oh well, in Amanpour’s world anyone, including atheists and agnostics, liberals and conservatives, are all social drop-outs if we home school our children. And the latest data seems to show that there’s over 2 million children in the U.S. who are being home schooled today. That’s a whole lot of craziness going on!

Or could it be that parents realize they’re not getting a bang for their buck in the “public” (or as someone else called it, “secular”) school system? I remember my oldest grandchild one year bringing home a list of items they needed to buy for the classroom. Pencils, pens, that’s expected. But paper bags, Kleenex tissue, toilet paper, and items that I don’t recall ever having to provide for the school when I was growing up.

But it’s more than supplies, competitive clothes, and who has the coolest cellphone and backpack. A lot of parents are concerned that the schools have overstepped their boundaries in the past twenty years. We have people like Jocelyn Elders and Barak Obama calling for “age appropriate sex education” starting in Kindergarten. Pray tell, what about sex is age-appropriate for a five year old?

Years ago I ended up in front of a school board, on the news and finally at the state Capitol testifying against the infusion into the schools of a so-called “anti-drug” program. One would think an anti-drug program would warn children that using pot and other illegal substances is a violation of the law and that was a good reason NOT to imbibe. This program told the kids to “clarify THEIR values” about drug use, and not let the world around them guide their decisions.

Um. Gee. Wonder why parents opposed the program? Wonder why law enforcement did as well?

Think about this for a moment. Columbine isn’t the only school where there’s been violence. And while most public schools are fairly safe, there’s mounting evidence that they may not be safe enough. In a report entitled Violence In United States Public Schools, the conclusion:

“During the 1999-2000 school year, 71 percent of U.S. public schools reported experiencing at least one violent incident, and the total number of incidents reported was 1,466,395. With respect to serious violence, 20 percent reported at least one incident, and a total of 60,719 incidents were reported. Correspondingly, 36 percent of schools reported at least one violent incident to the police and a total of 256,876 incidents, whereas 15 percent of schools reported at least one incident of serious violence to police and a total of 34,281 incidents.”

Maybe it won’t be the Navarr children’s local school which would become the next Columbine, and certainly Columbine like incidents are the rarity. But to claim they’re dropping out of society for trying to raise their children in a less hostile environment, one where the parents’ have some control (and a say-so about the curriculum) doesn’t seem like a “warrior” to me. To me it sounds like common sense.

SOUND THE BATTLE CRY.
Amanpour would be very uncomfortable at a Carman concert. He sings songs with lyrics like:
“The only hope, for America, is Jesus. The only hope, for our country, is Him. If we repent, of our ways, stand firm and say, 'We need God in America, again.”

Usually there’s one heck of a light show, lot’s of drumbeat, shouting, excitement, and commitment. I guess that’s not allowed for Christians, right?

BATTLECRY is a reaction. It’s a reaction to what many parents, and the group leaders see, as a ruining of our youth in an increasingly secular society. If one listened to Amanpour’s report, one would think that the group was out there trying to recruit for Al Queda. In fact, she claims that the founder, Ron Luce, has “declared war on the American lifestyle.”

I wasn’t aware that homosexuality, pornography, drug abuse, alcoholism, and child sexualization constituted the “American lifestyle.” Apparently this is her view of the “American lifestyle.” And that offends me. 

At one point in the CNN special a counter protestor was heard saying that Luce’s group was “anti-gay, anti-woman, pro-war and pro-obedience.” He was also accused of “imposing his conservative values on the rest of society.”

I would ask this:

1) Which group, in the past fifty years, has been responsible for getting abortion legalized on a national scale?
2) Which group, in the past fifty years, has sought to deny state’s rights and overturn laws in order to make homosexuality more accepted?
3) Which group, in the past fifty years, has fought to remove religion from the public forum, including schools, monuments, etc.
4) Which group has presented Christians, Christ and Christianity in the worst possible light in television, movies, theatre, and music?

I’m guessing it isn’t the Evangelical Christians.

All law is based on someone’s view of what is and is not moral. Someone’s morals will win out. And everyone (including the very liberals) seek to impose their “brand” of morality on everyone else via the law.

So let’s look at the things Luce and his group oppose, shall we?

>Every second - $3,075.64 is being spent on pornography
>Every second - 372 Internet users are typing adult search terms into search engines
>Every 39 minutes: a new pornographic video is being created in the United States
>Average age of first Internet exposure to pornography 11 years old
>15-17 year olds having multiple hard-core exposures 80%
>Children's character names linked to thousands of porn links 26 (Including Pokemon and Action Man)

I can’t imagine why Luce would be a little upset, can you?

On the other hand, even the Guttmacher Institute recognizes that abstinence teaching (combined with birth control use) has reduced the numbers of unplanned teen pregnancy. When it comes to abortion, there has been a marked DECREASE in abortion over the past four years, according to combined data and estimates.

I am curious as to why it’s considered “radical” to oppose things that hurt our kids? Let’s see, if a girl gets pregnant at fourteen and gets an abortion, is she better off than if she didn’t? Are kids better off with the proliferation of unchecked porn, including kiddie porn? And what about the issue of homosexuality?

When two parents decided to film a pro-homosexual presentation at the school where their children attend, they were told to leave the campus or be charged with trespassing:

“A distraught Kim Cariani told the Boston Herald she believes the school's ‘To BGLAD: Transgender, Bisexual, Gay and Lesbian Awareness Day’ has no place in the curriculum.”

It’s important to note that the school did not notify parents. So who is pushing what on to whom? And what about the kids’ right not to be exposed to the onslaught in an academic institution?

It’s this kind of thing that has the parents and kids involved in Luce’s group in an uproar. While it hardly represents ALL of America (Amanpour has us believing that this is America’s lifestyle) abortion, homosexuality, pornography, etc., DO concern America’s youth. If some of those youth happen to oppose these things, is it wrong for them to have a voice?

Eventually we were led to believe these kids were put into some cult like trance. One young girl, with her back to the camera, was walking down a breezeway singing to herself. Amanpour pronounced that she was “in a trance” (maybe her butt was in a trance- her face wasn’t caught on camera at that point). The young girl gave an emotional testimony on camera. Had she been crying about meeting a hot rock star instead of Jesus, I guess Amanpour could have found that a tad more acceptable.

CONCLUSION.
There is so much more I could say and point out that was flawed in this report. I suppose Ms. Amanpour felt it was balanced. I contend it was not. But the one thing that stuck out in my mind was her constant reference to this person or that person as having “found God.”

I guess nobody ever told her that it isn’t God who is lost, rather, it's man who is lost in sin. And woman, too.

Jesus elevated women to a status they had never known before His coming. And Paul, in spite of feminist misinterpretations, recognized the importance of women before the Lord. Women played an important role in the New Testament, as witnesses, disciples and teachers.

Try reading the book, Ms. Amanpour.



LINKS:
SBC statement:
http://www.sbc.net/bfm/bfm2000.asp

Abortion:
http://www.nrlc.org/abortion/facts/abortionstats.html see also:
http://www.abortiontv.com/Misc/AbortionStatistics.htm
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (1) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Suspected Terrorists near Missile Sight

It was a sobering thought when I first learned that I and my children were living across from the Polaris Missile Facility in South Carolina. It was equally sobering to realize that we were also housed next to the storage facility for W-80-0 Tomahawk’s, SCLM munitions and nuclear aerial bombs. So when my Mom came to visit that year, and asked me "what’s that fenced area across from housing?" I smiled and said: "officers housing…"

I know the rule of law says innocent until proven guilty, but I couldn’t help the shivers that went up and down my spine when I heard that two men had been stopped near the Naval Weapons Station, Goose Creek, S.C., with explosives. To make the shiver stronger, the two men fit the "model" for suicide bombers: male, middle eastern decent, between 19 and 29, and more recently it seems the model also includes "no known ties to terrorist groups".

The story told by CAIR (the Council on American Islamic Relations) and the families is that these two University of South Florida students were merely on a weekend road trip to North Carolina.

Of course they just so happened to have "fireworks" left over from the fourth of July in the trunk, and just so happened to be toting a laptop (which they tried to quickly stash in the back seat). And they just so happened to have stopped off at the WalMart to buy a few items like potassium chlorate and sugar (which make "instant fire"), some pvc piping, some hobby store brand rocket launchers and fuses. Okay, maybe they were making their own fireworks?


And they just so happened to be speeding (60 in a 45 mph zone) within 8 miles of a Naval Weapons Station. Home of Missile Site, ordinance storage for ships and subs, a brig where enemy combatants have been held, and an open military housing area.


Seems to me the only coincidence here is that they got caught speeding. All the rest seems to fall into the model of "let’s blow up something for Allah." But I could be wrong.

You’ve got to hand it to CAIR though. Within a couple of days they had their Islamophobia speech ready:


"Had these been two good ol’ boys from South Carolina driving through and speeding, and even if they did have some fireworks, nobody would’ve been arrested," says Ahmed Bedier of the Tampa Chapter of CAIR.


Excuse me sir, but you sound like a Redneckaphobic to me! How dare you assume that the people of Goose Creek, including it’s police force, are a bunch of bigots.

Having lived there, I can tell you that old Smokey loves to catch "the bandit", be he redneck, military, and yes, even middle eastern. And, I must add here: if you’re going to act suspiciously and carry questionable materials anywhere near a Military base, you’re pretty much asking for trouble.


Correction. You’re standing up and screaming: COME AND GET ME, I’M STUPID!


Who were these guys anyway?


Yousef Megahed (21) is an undergraduate student from Egypt and a resident of the United States, but not a citizen. Reports from the University of South Florida state that he has been at USF since 2004 and has not yet declared his major, though he was enrolled for three hours for this fall semester.


Ahmed Mohammed (24) is also a student from USF since January and a civil engineering graduate. He is from Kuwait and registered for six hours in summer session.


The FBI is clear to state that thus far the two have no ties to terrorist groups. Maybe not. And I’m not convinced they have to be. Thwarted attempts to commit acts of terror have been inspired merely by the desire to achieve a guaranteed place in Jennet, or Islamic paradise. It would appear that one doesn’t have to be part of a Muslim gang, such as Al-Queda, to want to participate in a personal Jihad.


The University of South Florida has spawned some interesting characters within the past few years as well. Back in 2003 there was Professor Sami Al-Arian and his band of seven- all members of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (Al-Arian was the founder of the North American chapter). They were charged with operating a global terrorist organization. He was from Kuwait also (read more about it here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sami_Al-Arian ).


Were these two men, Mohammed and Megahed, related to any such group? We don’t know and may never know. It’s likely they weren’t. What I do know is this:


We live in a time where it’s simply foolhardy for any person of Middle Eastern decent to go around acting weird. By weird I don’t mean the kind of weird that gave the Three Stooges fame.


By "weird" I mean Imams acting in a way so as to spook other travelers on a plane.


By "weird" I mean washing your feet in a sink in the public washroom of a hospital.


By "weird" I mean walking around in an airport, in camouflage pants covered by traditional Muslimah garb, seemingly surveying the area and making crack-pot statements like: "I'm a trained sniper and proud of it."

By the way, this brainy broad also claimed to have "no ties to terrorist groups."


By "weird" I mean speeding through a town, carrying "incendiary devices" in your trunk, trying to ditch your laptop, and doing so near a military facility.


Doing these kinds of things, especially in the wake of recent terrorist attempts here on American soil, isn’t a wise thing to do. And if CAIR wants the rest of us to even remotely think they’re not supportive of terrorism, they’re going to have to stop framing these kinds of behaviors as "innocent" and the people who do them as "victims of Islamophobia."


I don’t expect this to happen though. CAIR doesn’t "CARE" about the importance of Muslims assimilating to the culture in which they live and becoming aware of the need to be self-patrolling. They’re entering into the era of Civil Rights from the Malcolm X side rather than the Martin Luther King side of cultural acceptance and adaptation.

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

The Common Thread: From Whence Cometh Extremism?

It wasn’t over on 9-11. Not by a long shot. Looking at the FBI website we find an interesting accumulation of cases in which people have taken full advantage of their freedoms in the United States to do the unthinkable: help fund and/or actively engage in, terrorist activities against the citizens of the very country which has protected them and their families.


Money laundering and other schemes seem to have been directly linked to main terrorist groups like Hezbollah, Hamas, and other groups situated primarily in the Middle East. And while law enforcement talks about the terrorist cells among us, what we are seeing with more and more frequency are not Hezbollah cells coming forward, rather, small, independent groups which seemingly have no links nor ties to established terrorist organizations.


The D.C. snipers, for example, had no links to major terrorist groups. In fact, John Allen Muhammed (the elder of the two) was a member of Nation of Islam (NOI) which is NOT ON THE TERRORIST WATCH LIST. Though one has to ask why that is so, given the long history of NOI members participating in murderous acts. The Zebra murders which took place between 1973-74 were considered one of the most heinous race-related attacks in American history.
 
All totaled, 71 people were killed. These were whites killed by black "death angels" from the Nation of Islam. Included were two Salvation Army Cadets. One woman was decapitated. Most were old, feeble, or otherwise unable to defend themselves.


Fast forward to the Fort Dix Six. Not all criminal activity relating to Muslims comes from the NOI. Video showed the six, along with several other young men in their twenties, sporting assault weapons and yelling Allah Akbar!


Of the six arrested, three are brothers. They’re from Yugoslavia. Links to established terrorist groups? None. Link to Nation of Islam? None. They ran a roofing company. Their friends, the other three, included a taxi driver, a 7-11 store clerk and a pizza store worker. All foreign born. All living in the U.S. All Muslim.


Go back a step. We have the incident in 2006 wherein Jose Padilla and others conspired to blow up the Sears Tower. He tried to reach al-Queda but never got in touch with them apparently. Narsen Batiste, was the recruiter for the group calling itself the "Seas of David".

The Seas of David was part of the "Moorish Science Temple of America", founded in 1913 and holds, as it’s basic belief, the idea that all blacks are born Muslim and descended from the Moors.


Forward to 2007. Sulejmen Talovic, an 18 year old Bosnian Muslim refugee murdered five and wounded four others in a mall in Salt Lake City, Utah. No ties to terrorist groups. He was apparently just another Muslim.


Hop back to 1997 and the shootings off of the Empire State Building. Ali Abu Kamal was an American resident. He killed one person and turned the gun on himself. No ties to terrorist groups. Just a deep-seated hatred for Israel and America’s pro-Israeli stance. And a belief that he had to dabble in Jihad. Oh yeah. He too, was Muslim.


Jump up to 2002 and Imran Mandhai. His plan was to blow up Mt. Rushmore. Now, before you cheer (some Americans think it’s an eyesore, if you’re one of them, get over it) he also wrote and printed copies of a little instruction booklet for would-be jihadists entitled: "Skills Necessary for Jihad."


Clip forward again, to December 2006. Derrick Shareef, an American Muslim, decides to try and blow up a shopping mall in Chicago (Merry Christmas?) His plan was foiled. There’s no record of his having direct connections to any terrorist groups.


Now the events of this past week. Russell Defreitas, a 63 year old man, leads a little group of younger men to attempt a terrorist act. Defreitas had no known ties to any of the major terrorist groups. He was trying to "hook up with some heavy-hitters" but never got to. His reason for selecting JFK International may seem simplistic and childish to us, but Teddy Kennedy may want to rethink his stance on being so understanding of the enemy:


"Any time you hit a Kennedy, it is the most hurtful thing to the United States. To hit John F. Kenney, wow. They love John F. Kennedy like he’s the man. If you hit that, this whole country will be in mourning. It’s like you can kill the man twice."


So let’s see here. Is birthplace the consistent factor? No. Is race? No. Age leans towards the young, but not always. Hitting landmarks is almost consistent, but not always. What about being influenced by external terrorist groups like Hezbollah?

Nope. While many in the money-laundering and fund raising end of terrorist activity have been related to established terrorist groups, in recent years we are seeing a disturbing thread: the only thing the plotters on our soil all have in common is Islam.


Of course that’s always been there. The 9-11 hijackers had that in common, too. But they were also linked to external terrorist groups. This means influence. We can almost excuse those who come under the tutelage of charismatic terrorist leaders. Note that I said ALMOST excuse.

There is personal responsibility there regardless of how much influence someone has over you.

But all these others come from outside that Middle Eastern influence. They don’t know one another. They didn’t all attend the same Mosque nor even hang out in the same hukkah bar.

The only thing they all have in common is Islam.


During the news conference addressing the arrests of those involved in the attempted assault on JFK Airport, New Jersey U.S. Attorney, Christopher Christie stated:


"The philosophy that supports and encourages jihad around the world against Americans came to live here in New Jersey and threaten the lives of our citizens through these defendants."


This philosophy, Mr. Christie, didn’t spring out of nowhere. Yes, it came from another part of the world. And it’s being disseminated in our own country. Not by wild-eyed radicals in long beards and head dresses. But via a belief system which teaches that, while there is "no compulsion in religion", the world would be a much more peaceful place if we were all Muslim. And by Allah, we’ll get that peace if we have to kill each and every infidel to do it.


This may seem hard line. Do I really think that all Muslims in America would want to kill the non-believers? I don’t know. All I know is what I see. Rather, what I don’t see: the blanket condemnation of these actions WHEN THEY HAPPEN.

And don’t tell me Muslims cannot get it together enough to protest this kind of behavior. If each one acted independently, as the terrorists mentioned above have done, Muslims who disapprove of these attempts to harm their fellow Americans would be out in synergic force.


Instead we get silence. In going to the CAIR website (Council on American Islamic Relations) what do I see on their front page? Articles about Muslims raising awareness for breast cancer. Stories about Muslims’ rights being "violated". A press release dated from June 1, 2007 (the same day the plot broke in the news) demanding that a Guantanamo detainee have a Canadian lawyer.

Silence about the attempt to kill what could have amounted to thousands of Americans.


In going to freemuslims.org, a group which claims to represent Muslims who oppose terrorism, what I find is an absence of condemnation for the recent event. Generic denials and arguments are nice, but something of this magnitude is certainly worth a five minute write up, don’t you think?


Maybe because it’s the weekend? No wait, Sunday is the Christian day. Saturday is the Jewish day. Friday is the Muslim day. Why the delay?


I suspect we may eventually hear some denunciation of the Fort Dix Six and the JFK International plot. After the denunciation has been checked over by attorneys and screened by Imams. In the meantime, we all wait. And wonder: What will be the next target?

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Suicide Bombers: The Problem At Our Door?

A recent Pew Research Survey (see: Muslims In America) revealed something that should be of primary interest to our leaders in Washington. According to the survey, 8% of all American Muslims between 18-29 believe there are times when suicide bombings are acceptable.

While the survey doesn’t indicate whether or not those in that 8% would commit such a crime, the fact that they can see some validity behind the action could indicate that there are some 56,000 young Muslims out there who would, if they had the chance and ability, participate in a suicide bombing on American soil.


It is easy to try and blame poverty, a lack of education, even a problem with social morality for the increase of suicide bombers. Even our President has bought into the notion:


"We fight poverty because hope is the answer to terror... We will challenge the poverty and hopelessness and lack of education and failed governments that too often allow conditions that terrorists can seize".


Research conducted over the past few years challenges the once accepted theory that suicide bombers- who are predominantly males between the ages of 18-29, are mentally ill, poor, disenfranchised and uneducated.


Most of those engaging in suicide bombing are noted as being young, middle class, they may have had difficult lives growing up (traumas, abuse, etc.), and have at least a High School level education.

They are generally not impoverished, and showed no signs of mental pathology.


But there are two things which they do seem to have in common which could help in addressing the issue of suicide bombers: 1) either they or their parents come from countries where there are limited political freedoms, and, 2) they have strong religious or political beliefs.


While there are many Muslims out there who decry this sort of thing as contrary to the Koranic teachings, there are those who are insistent on what they perceive as true Islam. They make up the martyrs and those who encourage suicide attacks. They have redefined such words as "attack" and "innocent" so as to blur the distinction between war and curtailment of terrorist activity.

 

  

RELIGIOUS BELIEFS and SUICIDE BOMBING

Perhaps no greater controversy exists than that of the role of Islam when it comes to acts of suicide bombing. Some believe that Islam encourages- if not outright commands- a person to kill themselves in the "cause of Allah". Others claim that JIHAD (struggle) can apply to anything and that Islam detests suicidal acts.


As with any controversial issue the truth likely lay somewhere in the middle, in between both points of view.


In order to understand why Islam plays a predominant role in the actions of those who would make themselves "martyrs" for Allah, one first has to look at how they’re taught to view the world- in particular the Western world- around them.


Sociologists suggest that one of the identifiers of a cult is that they tend to enforce a separation between the cult member and the world around them. This is not esoteric separatism. It is a type of radical, mental isolationism which has, at it’s core, a sense of personal and religious elitism. What we often summarize as "holier than thou" but with an extremist bent which makes it perfectly acceptable to see certain persons or groups as expendable- not based on anything they do- rather- based upon a holiness perception.


For example, when discussing America with his followers Shaykh N
asir bin Hamad al-Fahd lists statistical data about America: 20 million sexual deviants live in America; over 5,000 children are bought/sold every year; 1/3 of all American children are born out of wedlock; one out of every 20 people are kidnapped; there are 100 million alcoholics, and the list goes on and on, including a dismal laundry list of crimes perpetrated in 2000.


He also blames the presence of the American military in Bangkok for "the spread of corruption and deviation there" as well as claiming that:

The largest source of vile films in the world is Hollywood, the capitol of cinema, in America.
 

The largest nation with respect to the number of pornographic stations and websites on the Internet is America.


The largest alcohol and cigarette companies are found in America.


The largest firearm manufacturing companies that produce weapons in which man kills others with are found in America.

What al-Fahd does NOT do in all this is point out that Muslims are also imbibing in these behaviors as well (read more of his analysis of America here:
http://amreekan.wordpress.com/tag/crusade-onslaught-against-islam/).

All of this is seen, not merely as a degradation of a particular society, but as a "crusade" against Islam. Al-Fahd doesn’t see this degradation as insular. Rather, he sees it as having an affect on Islam.

To wit: the great Satan and all of it’s minions are trying to demoralize Islam, to bring it down MORALLY, not just politically. The war, therefore, isn’t simply a war of political ideologies, it is also a war of moral ideologies deeply rooted in a religious system.


What could be more appealing to a young Muslim male, age 19 or 20, who feels he has no real purpose or mission in life? Who has been emotionally, if not physically, separated from the world around him? Who sees bad things going on in the world and who, in order to make sense of things, finds an answer for where to lay the blame?


The Koran is specific in it’s assessment of the Muslim:


"You are the best nation that has ever been raised for mankind; you enjoin the doing of what is right and forbid what is wrong, and you believe in Allah. Had the people of earlier revelation believed, it would have been for their own good. Few of them are believers, while most of them are evildoers".


The "people of earlier revelation" are the Jews and Christians.

America, for many Muslims, is seen as a "Christian" country by default. Therefore, Christians (aka Crusaders) birthed a nasty, evil, Satanic nation and it continues to be viewed this way by not a few Muslims around the world but in particular, those who are bent towards suicide bombing attacks. They believe they are defending Islam- not from extinction- but from infiltration by the unholy world around them.


In order to make the point that America is in a war against Islam itself leaders like Al-Fahd ask the question: why doesn’t the United States go after other groups? And lists off such organizations as the Tamil Tigers, the IRA, the Mafia, and other such groups whose crimes do not include threats against the whole of the United States.


But for the young Muslim man who is looking to his religion for meaning and purpose, and who may already see America as an enemy for it’s support of Israel, this makes sense. America isn’t after terrorists- America is after ISLAM. The idea that most of the attacks against America over the past 20 plus years have come from Islamic extremist groups never occurs to him.


He is also given a laundry list of America’s attempts to rule the world by eradicating other groups of people: one hundred million native Americans exterminated; two million African-American slaves exterminated; Hiroshima and Nagasaki; Viet Nam war; etc. And in more recent times, the claims that American embargos and bombardments have killed one million Iraqi children; that thousands of newborn infants are born blind due to lack of insulin; and the list goes on and on.


But the problem with the laundry list is that it’s a supply of half (if that) of the actual story. So, while the media bombards a young Muslim male- who loves his religion and believes he should defend it as per Koranic edict- with images of Abu Ghraib and talks about the "rights" of those detained at GITMO- all of which makes it appear as if there really IS a war against Islam going on- the input of religious leaders only separates him even more from the society at large.


Taken all together, the only conclusion the young person can draw is that he must (or she must) defend their faith, if necessary, with their very lives. This is the stuff "martyrs" are made of. At least in the minds of those who believe that they must die in the cause of Allah lest the West take them over.


If you want to see how this works in practice, simply check out this blog:

http://shaheenvision.wordpress.com/2007/05/25/you-are-an-arab-imagine-that/#more-83 (copy and paste into your browser).

You will read a litany of "suppose this was you" situations- most of which are skewed from actual facts (there were no throngs of "right wing missionaries" flooding into Iraq after the fall of Saddam to convert Muslims. In fact- Christians fled and are still fleeing Iraq to where their numbers have dropped from over a million to less than 100,000.

In a fatwah from Omar Bakri dated for March 20, 2004, we read:

"Therefore, we must not be surprised that the Disbelievers are planning to destroy Islam and Muslims, because that is one of their main tasks, even though it is impossible for them to achieve, as their plot will always be exposed until the Day of Judgement. Allah (SWT) says: ‘We will test you in order to see who the Mujaahid (warrior) among you is and who are firm…’ [EMQ Muhammad, 47:31]"


To think that this will go away when those 18-29 are older, or gone, is wishful thinking. The war on terror is, by default, a war on Islam. Not only because of those Muslims who actively promote and encourage terrorism, but also because of those who sit passively by, content that THEY aren’t into such things, without realizing they, too, could be targets.


There is another generation to come. That generation will grow up to blow up, unless Muslims themselves do not take steps to stop it from happening. In April of 2007, MEMRI television disclosed the use of Mickey Mouse by Islamists in training children for Jihad. A transcript of the video makes it’s intention quite clear:


Host Saraa, a young girl
: Sanabel, what will you do for the sake of the Al-Aqsa Mosque? How will you sacrifice your soul for the sake of Al-Aqsa? What will you do?


Sanabel, young girl on phone:
I will shoot.


Farfour, a Mickey Mouse character in a tuxedo
: Sanabel, what should we do if we want to liberate...


Sanable
: We want to fight.


Farfour
: We got that. What else?


Saraa
: We want to...


Sanabel
: We will annihilate the Jews.


Saraa
: We are defending Al-Aqsa with our souls and our blood, aren't we, Sanabel?


Sanabel
: I will commit martyrdom.


 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Muslims in America: What Do They Think?

When polls coming out of the UK showed that a substantial minority of England’s Muslim population sympathized with the 7-7 bombers, others in western countries began to wonder: is that the attitude of Muslims here?


Pew Research recently published a report entitled: Muslim Americans- Middle Class and Mostly Mainstream. The report is already generating commentary. On the Glenn Beck show (5-23-07) the report was cited as a concern in terms of the numbers of Muslims who believed that suicide bombing in "defense of Islam" was sometimes justified.


The research survey is the first of it’s kind in the United States. Therefore, it becomes of interest to anyone who is concerned not only with our society in general, but with the very continuity of American life and liberty.


According to Pew Research and other sources, the estimated Muslim population within the United States is 2.35 million. Of that number, most appear to have immigrated to the U.S. Some 65% of those surveyed stated they were foreign born, with 24% of those coming from Arab countries and with the majority having immigrated here between 1990-1999.


Of those who are native-born (which constitutes 35% of all Muslims in America) some 21% were converts, or "reverts" to Islam. And most of those (20%) are African-American.


This demographic is disconcerting to some people. Especially in a post-911 world and, more specifically, given the fact that those who assaulted our country on 9-11 were of Arab descent. But there’s also concern about the conversion ratio amongst African-Americans who seem to be predominantly recruited from prisons. According to an article in the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, one out of every three African-Americans in federal prison are Muslim and converted while they were in prison.


According to RELIGIONLINK:


Today, African-American Muslims are among the fastest-growing segments of Islam, accounting for about 30 percent of all American Muslims.


Radical Islam and the American Muslim

The Pew survey found that more American Muslims reject radical Islam than do their counterparts in other countries. Yet oddly enough, the survey also noted that there was more acceptance of extremism among certain groups within the U.S. than within other U.S. groups of Muslims. The survey noted that fewer native-born African-American Muslims were willing to totally condemn Al Queda than other Muslims.


Part of the reason for the unwillingness to condemn a radical faction of Islam could have something to do with the type of Islam with which most African-American converts adhere. Nation of Islam and Wahhabism (which is spread by the Saudi’s) seem to be the two sects which draw mainly from the African-American community.


Both groups are known for their "in your face" history of violence.


The survey also found, however, that younger Muslims (15%), regardless of color or sect, are more likely than older Muslims (6%) to "express a strong sense of Muslim identity" and that suicide bombing, in defense of Islam, is sometimes justified.


The data becomes even more disconcerting. Of the Muslims under the age of thirty, not only do they show to be more religious than their older counter-parts, but 60% of younger respondents consider themselves to be MUSLIM FIRST, American, second. In contrast with French Muslims (46%) and British Muslims (50%), this is startling.


THE YOUTH OF ISLAM IN AMERICA?

The next generation of any group determines what their society will be like for many years to come.

According to the research, 50% of Muslims between 18-29 attend Mosque on a regular basis. Some 8% of those in the 18-29 bracket hold a positive view of Al Queda. This isn’t a coincidence. With most being Sunni and most (80%) believing the Koran is the Word of God and 50% opting for a literal reading of it’s text, there’s a potential making for terrorist attacks on U.S. soil again.


It should be noted that of the 19 who carried out the attacks on 9-11, fourteen were between the ages of 19-29. It should also be noted that Lindsey Germaine, a convert to Islam was only 19 when he carried out his 7-7 plans with co-conspirators Mohammed Siddique Khan (barely 30), Shezad Tanweer (22), and Hasib Hussein (18). If we look at the attacks it becomes clear that, with but a few exceptions, suicide bombers tend to be male, between 18-29, and very religious.


The survey also noted that of those between the ages of 18-29, some 61% believe the government should be involved in "protecting morality." This shows a marked trend towards acceptance and integration of Shariah Law for a majority of the younger Muslims surveyed.


LETTING THE NUMBERS SPEAK.

While it’s obvious that most American Muslims do not approve of the acts of terrorism going on today; and while many seem to genuinely like their lives in the United States, it also seems markedly clear that there is a potential danger facing us, not only from outside the United States, but from within our own borders.


Whittling down the numbers: of the estimated 2.3 million adult Muslims some 30% (or 705,000) fall between 18-29 years of age. Of that, 8% (or 56,000) believe suicide bombings in "defense of Islam" are warranted.


That may not sound like many. And of course, there may well be those who believe this but would never act on it. But how can we tell who will or will not?


Condemning all Muslims because of the few is unjustified. But to shrug off as insignificant the numbers of potential terrorists- all true believers in Islam (so they say) who believe they are doing Allah’s will, would be a grave mistake. We have to be right 100% of the time. They only have to be right once.

Whether you’re Muslim or non-Muslim, if it’s the shopping mall your wife is in; if it’s the daycare your child attends; or the business office your husband works in; one time is one time too many.

 

 

 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Get a Life, Mr. Murtha!

Mr. Murtha is demanding an apology from Presidential hopeful, John McCain (sigh) again. I suppose it wasn’t considered in the best of taste for McCain to play on the old Beach Boys tune, singing: "bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb Iraq", even if it is what half of the free world is probably thinking.


So now Murtha is demanding that McCain apologize for saying something on a comedy show that, unless you’re dead, was actually worth a snicker. As a guest on "The Daily Show" with Jon Stewart, when asked whether he wanted to start by singing the bomb Iraq song or talk about the shopping trip to Baghdad, McCain opted to start with the shopping trip:


"I had something picked out for you, too, a little IED to put on your desk."


Jon Stewart laughed. The audience laughed. Everyone but Murtha’s wife’s friend’s dog’s neighbor’s aunt in Canada laughed.

That’s right. On the floor of the Senate, Mr. Murth- WHO DIDN’T EVEN SEE THE SHOW CLIP but instead went on a misrepresentation told to him third hand, demanded an apology from McCain on behalf of the troops serving in Iraq.


According to Murtha, a joke on a comedy show (imagine that) which didn’t even mention the troops, was insulting to the troops? Wasn’t this the same Murtha who, barely one month after the beginning of the surge of troops in Iraq, had this to say:


I think the surge has failed. I think there was no possibility that it was going to work…


Let’s see. Basically Murtha is telling the Generals in charge of the upsurge that they’re a bunch of doofuses who don’t know what they’re doing and since they couldn’t do it in a couple of months anyway, it’s all failed policy. He’s also telling all the brave men and women serving in Iraq that they’ve failed as well.


And he thinks McCain needs to apologize?


Mr. Murtha, when you apologize for calling the work our young men and women have been doing in Iraq a "failure" then we can talk about apologies. In the meantime, I disagree with Mr. McCain. It’s not "a life" you need to get, it’s a sense of humor.

 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

The Wahhabi Lobby: How America is screwing herself by making “nice-nice” with the wrong people

"The enemy of my enemy of my friend" is a policy that has caused the United States in resources and lives.

Sure, we would all like to think that "our guy" in the White House, be it JFK, Reagan, Clinton, or Bush, Jr., has a handle on our policies regarding the Middle East and terrorism.


For some reason, this unofficial policy is never contemplated in terms of the long run. Were it so contemplated, those who seek to utilize it would realize that "the enemy of my enemy is my friend" only works insofar as mutual self-interests remain secure, else wise the enemy of my enemy becomes an enemy later on.


Examples? Does World War II ring a bell? Sure, Russia helped us take out the Nazi’s. What happened later? We ended up in a Cold War with Russia that lasted decades.


Other examples of this being a bad policy? How about one more direct, to wit: our support of Iran, in particular Muhammed Reza (the appointed Shah). Lovely scene it is: Iran signs the Baghdad Pact and the U. S. offers the impoverished country (a country impoverished by it’s own leaders) both foreign and military aid.


Ah, the joys of boot camp! We even train the little boogers!


Iran enters into the "White Revolution", a period economic and social reforms. But these reforms are apparently mere cosmetics. And the people, impoverished all over again, seek a new leader in the Ayatolla Khomeini. Khomeini exiles the Shah, and retakes control, effectively serving ties with the United States, whom he declares to be "the Great Satan". He also manages to dismantle what had been a strong, rather large, military.


Doesn’t matter. As long as the Great Satan, the evil empire that fed us and trained our military, is out of our hair.


Oh, and did we mention that every Friday after Mosque, there’s a "Death to America" rally in the street?


The enemy of my enemy is my friend, indeed!


Knowing this policy doesn’t work, I have to ask the question: Why the hell is our government making nice-nice with backers of our enemies?


No, this isn’t a conspiracy. In fact, you’d have to be dense (or minus C-Span) not to know about it. What I’m referring to is the open arms given to what I call Muslim Support Groups, or better labeled: Terrorist-Light.


One such group is an organization called ISNA, the Islamic Society of North America. ISNA claims to be devoted to "advancing the cause of Islam in North America" (a thought that makes me a tad nervous, given certain Koranic references) (1), ISNA held it’s annual convention this month in Chicago (2).


C-Span was kind enough to air a portion of the convention, the Leadership Development Conference. Watching the conference on television, with but one exception, it all seemed rather warm and fuzzy. Almost a "kumbayah" experience.


There was mention of the first Prayer Center on a military base (3). There was talk about national security and the International Visitor Exchange program.


Among the speakers were Deputy Secretary of Defense, Gordon England; Deputy Assistant Secretary for Educational and Cultural Affairs, Alina Romanowski; Deputy Assistant Administration Bureau for Asia and the Near East (USAID), Mark Ward; and heck, even the Boy Scouts were there--- in the form of BSA President, David Richardson.


WHAT THE HECK? That was my first thought. Why in God’s little green earth was the Deputy Secretary of Defense there? Why was anyone from the Administration there? The Boy Scouts I could understand; they’ll help anyone across the street. But representatives from this administration?


Founded in 1963, ISNA is based in Plainfield, Indiana and is an umbrella group for several associations for youth, college students, engineers, etc. Among those associations is SOUND VISION, whose president, Abdul Malik Mujahid, was more than a little upset at this last convention. What was he upset about?


Why, Israel, of course:


"Do you think it was good to give Israel more time to kill Muslims in Lebanon?"
(4)


Hardly sounds like an impartial man where Israel is concerned. But that’s ok, we’re allowed to talk about how unfairly Muslims are being treated in this country and call it "Islamophobia".


But what makes the group questionable isn’t just their opposition to Israel. It’s what they ARE linked to: Wahhabism.


A Rose By Any Other Name Still Gets Aphids

In my not-so-humble opinion, ISNA is little more than a Wahhabi front- group. Of course, for those who know nothing about the Wahhabi, this probably means very little. But disguising itself as a democratically oriented, pro-tolerance, pro-American organization does little to take away it’s aphids.


Rather than go into a lengthy discussion of the history of Wahhabism, I’m simply going to address the problems of it (6).


First, we have the problem of religious liberty. Wahhabism condemns as illegal the practice of using the name of Mohammed, or any Saint or any Angel in prayer; the worship of any deity other than Allah is likewise outlawed; attendance at public prayer is compulsory; shaving the head and/or face is forbidden; smoking is forbidden; and women have to wear that hijab or head covering. (7)


In case you think this only extends to the Wahhabi himself, let’s take a look at how non-wahhabis (who are still Muslim) are treated in, oh, say Saudi education.


According to the Center for Religious Freedom, textbooks for Saudi children show marked preference toward Wahhabism (the favored religion) over other sects of Islam. Their report, which was an analysis of textbook content, showed that the textbooks:

Condemn and denigrate the majority of Sunni Muslims who do not follow the Wahhabi understanding of Islam, and call them deviants and descendants of polytheists.


Condemn and denigrate Shiite and Sufi Muslims’ beliefs and practices as heretical and call them "polytheists;"


Command Muslims to "hate" Christians, Jews, "polytheists" and other "unbelievers," including non-Wahhabi Muslims, though, incongruously, not to treat them "unjustly";


Teach the infamous forgeries, The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, as historical fact;
 

Teach other conspiracy theories accusing Freemasons, Lions Clubs and Rotary Clubs of plotting to undermine Muslims;


Teach that "Jews and the Christians are enemies of the [Muslim] believers" and that "the clash" between the two realms is perpetual;


Instruct students not to "greet," "befriend," "imitate," "show loyalty to," "be courteous to," or "respect" non-believers;


Assert that the spread of Islam through jihad is a "religious duty;"


Instruct that "fighting between Muslims and Jews" will continue until Judgment Day, and that the Muslims are promised victory over the Jews in the end;


Include a map of the Middle East that labels Israel within its pre-1967 borders as "Palestine: occupied 1948." (8)

I really don’t need to ask if this reflects a tolerant group which will fit well into American society, do I? And representatives from this administration are attending the ISNA convention?


The Wahhabi Lobby and You

According to discoverthenetworks.org, a group dedicated to tracking leftist organizations in the U.S., ISNA is and organization that:


"…enforces Wahhabi theological writ in America's 1,200 officially recognized mosques (out of a possible total of 4,000, including unrecognized and small congregations)."
(9)


But ISNA has had more than a theological attachment problem. Former President of ISNA, Muzzamil Siddiqi, had this to say:


"America has to learn, if you remain on the side of injustice, the wrath of God will come. Please, all Americans. Do you remember that? If you continue doing injustice, and tolerate injustice, the wrath of God will come."
(10)


Granted, he tried to appear as a goodwill ambassador at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., after 9-11. But he never retracted the above sentiment.


Another thing we have to understand is that Wahhabism isn’t merely something practiced in Saudi Arabia. No, it also controls the majority of teaching and training for Imams in North America as well.


In 2003 Stephen Schwartz of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies offered his testimony before the Senate Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology and Homeland Security. In his testimony he specifically addressed the problem of Wahhabism in America.


In his testimony, he pointed to three goals of Wahhabism in America: 1) To control a significant group of Muslim believers; 2) to use the Muslim community in the U.S. to pressure government and the media in the formation of Muslim-friendly policies, including the "sensitivity training" garbage we’ve seen since 911; and, 3) Advancing the Wahhabi agenda of "jihad against the world." (11)


Mr. Schwartz wasn’t the only person testifying about the dangers of Wahhabism that day. Alex Alexiev, Senior Fellow for the Center for Security Policy also pointed out the domination capability of Wahhabism:


"…the Wahhabi creed which is practiced by no more than 20 million people around the world, or less than 2% of the Muslim population, has become a dominant factor in the international Islamic establishment through an elaborate network of front organizations and charities, as well as in a great number of national establishments, including the United States".
(12)


Yes, Virginia, money does make the world go ‘round. And when it comes to Wahhabism, the banker in this case is none less than the House of Saud.

    

You’re Grounded ‘Til You’re Sixty (and other things we say in the heat of the moment)

We’re fighting a war on terror, or so we’re told. I’m reminded of the many times I told my kids in a momentary rage.

Things like: you’re grounded ‘til you’re sixty! Or the ever-famous: I’ll beat you within an inch of your life. Since there’s no such measurement as an "inch of your life"; and since nobody wants their kid living at home until the kid is sixty, these tend to be things we say, and maybe mean at the time, but which we seldom truly mean.


I’m beginning to think this administration is like an angry parent where Islamofascism, and it’s threat to America, is concerned. I realize we’ve toppled Saddam. But in retrospect, that wasn’t such a difficult thing to do.


ISNA isn’t a harmless little group. They signed a document in 2002 composed by the radical group, Refuse and Resist, condemning military tribunals and the detention of immigrants being held post-911.

This group, Refuse and Resist, was one of the first groups to refer to Muslims as a "race", thus paving the way for those who want to use our laws against us (i.e.: hate speech laws being used to silence critics of Islam) to cry "racism" any time someone remotely suggests that there’s something wrong with Islam, or that profiling might be necessary:


"
[T]hey [the U.S. government] are coming for the Arab, Muslim and South Asian immigrants. Based on their racial profile, over 1500 have been rounded up and the government refuses to say who they are, where they are jailed and what the charges are!!!" (13)


Ya gotta love those racist allegations. Of course Islam is no more a race than the Elks lodge is.

But hey, if you can use it to silence a critic…


In 2005, a government investigation into ISNA was unable to make any direct ties between the group and terrorist organizations. But does a group have to have direct links to Osama Bin Laden in order to pose a threat to the nation?


No. It does not.


This past year, once again, this administration sent representatives to the ISNA convention. Maybe they didn’t know that the current President of ISNA (the first female president) has been defending Wahhabism and on two occasions compared it to the Protestant reformation (14).

I wonder if President Bush, a Protestant, likes having his faith compared to Wahhabism?

It’s time we stopped playing games. Terrorism is not a game. On the eve of the second anniversary of 911, Senator Chuck Schumer discussed the role that top Saudi officials played in the influence of Wahhabism in the United States. After a detailed walk down the bunny trail, Senator Schumer concluded:


The Bush Administration can also help by striking at the source of these organizations’ support: Saudi oil money. Secretary Powell and others must make it clear to the Saudi Royal Family that if it does not end its dirty deal with the extremist Wahhabi clerics, it will ends its relationship with the United States.
(15)


Nobody has listened to you, Mr. Schumer. And chances are, nobody is going to listen to me, or others, who oppose this snuggly-buggly that’s going on. But someday, if we find ourselves in the middle of a Wahhabi hissy-fit,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(1) Koran verses talking about world dominence

(2) Date and general info about convention

(3) The base they mentioned is Quantico Marine Corps Base, Quantico, VA. I had to wonder it they realize that QMCB also butts up next to the FBI Training Academy in Quantico?

(4) conference date broadcast on c-span

(5) half the brain of a man

(6) give link to info about wahhabism

(7) http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/saudi/analyses/wahhabism.html

(8) Center for Religious Freedom Press Release, May 23, 2006, A Division of Freedom House 1319 18th Street, NW • Washington, DC 20036 Telephone: (202) 296-5101

(9) http://www.discoverthenetworks.org

(10) ibid, October 28, 2000

(11) June 26, 2003, Stephen Schwartz, Wahhabism and Islam in the U.S. http://judiciary.senate.gov/testimony.cfm?id=827&wit_id=2356

(12) June 26, 2003, Alex Alexiev, Wahhabism: State-sponsored Extremism Worldwide http://judiciary.senate.gov/testimony.cfm?id=827&wit_id=2355

(13) http://www.refuseandresist.org/imm/012502ndsami.html

(14) CNN Town Hall Meeting, October 2001 and a roundtable for the Center for Strategic and International Studies Conference, November 2003. http://discardedlies.com/entry/?20114_isna-elects-a-woman-president

(15) Sept. 15, 2003

http://www.senate.gov/~schumer/SchumerWebsite/pressroom/press_releases/PR02009.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Ode to a Muslim Mouse

In the movie Air Force One, there’s a classic line referencing negotiating with terrorists: give a mouse a cookie and he’ll want a glass of milk. It would seem the mouse is demanding milk now. A Muslim mouse that is.


Two recent events which bring this to the forefront involve the right of newspapers to publish cartoons which are potentially offensive to Muslims (1) and the more recent Pope faux pas (2). We aren’t talking about hate crimes. Neither the Jylliands-Posten nor the Pope called for the deaths of Muslims, though calls for death did occur in reverse. (3)


What concerns me is that the reaction of Muslims is the same reaction we see from liberal groups who decry any criticism of their lifestyle, viewpoints, or whatever, as "hate speech." (4)


The difference, however, is that gay activists and other liberals, aren’t into beheadings. They (thankfully) draw the line at just being upset. On the other hand, Sharia law holds an appeal for the Muslim reactionaries who are trying to make the world conform to their values.


In essence, they have found a way to use our own laws against us. In an article for Capitalism Magazine, Carter Laren discussed the potential dangers of making "hate" a crime. Bear in mind, any time one criticizes Islam, they’re automatically declared a "hater" and told they must apologize for the offending statement, view, or breathing the air. Carter Laren hits the nail on the head:


Skirting freedom of speech by criminalizing illegitimate hatred is bad enough, but the real motive of the hate haters is not simply to outlaw morally inappropriate hatred--it is much worse. The real motive is to acquire the official power to dictate ideas.
(5)


Laren makes two valid points: 1) it’s not a good thing to criminalize hate because hate is an emotion, not always an action; and, 2) the ultimate and nefarious goal of those who would institute such laws is to control the rest of the population.


How does this translate into a benefit for Muslims? Quite simply, it offers them a forum to whine about the silliest things. Secondly, it also makes it possible for them to scare others into acquiescing to their "needs" as a legitimized minority.


Playing the Race Card

In a post-911 world, many Americans not of the Islamic persuasion, became a tad nervous about Muslims in their midst. Heck, even the feds were a little ruffled and hyper vigilant (7) so why shouldn’t the rest of the population have been a little cautious, if not outright, frightened? Think about it for a moment. One thing our country has had to contend with for decades has been the cult phenomenon and the dangers it embraces.

The Branch Davidians, The Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, Hale Bob, Jim Jones… the list goes on and on. To have one’s sect included into what Dr. Walter Martin called the Kingdom of the Cults, and more to the point, to have it referred to as a "death cult," derails it from the politically correct sympathy track.


But if you can become a victim, you’re in like flint.


And how better to become the darling of social liberals (thus getting the ACLU in your pocket) than to become race.


Paul Silverstein, professor of anthropology at Reed College in Oregon, is but one example of twisting the definition of "race" to include what is actually a religious cult:


Muslims are the new Jews…they're the object of a series of stereotypes, caricatures and fears which are not based in a reality and are independent of a person's experience with Muslims.
(8)


While I could get into a debate about whether or not race is a manufactured entity (I don’t believe it is), the point is that sociologists and anthropologists have defined the races in ways which never included religion and Islam, with it’s adherents being called Muslims, is no more a race than is Buddhism or Christianity.(9)


If it’s not bad enough that Muslims are trying to paint themselves as a race; if it isn’t bad enough that liberals and other rebels without a cause are buying into it; there has also been a concerted effort by Muslims to remake themselves into the "new Jews" as well. Which seems rather strange, given the anti-Jewish sentiment which prevails throughout the Middle East.(10)


When a group is finally painted as a race then it becomes easier to whine about any and every little perceived infraction:

 

Reverend Creighton Lovelace of Danieltown Baptist Church is pressured to remove a statement on the church’s sign: The Koran should be flushed. It offended Muslims.(11)

Burger King is pressured to spend thousands of dollars to change a logo on their ice cream cone lids after a Muslim, Rashad Akhtar, 27, claimed it resembled the Arabic word for "Allah" and hence, offended his senses.(12) Though Burger King did remove it, Rashad still carries a grudge:

I feel humiliated. I want to humiliate the person who did this to me to the

Extent that he never works again… Even though it means nothing to

some people and may mean nothing to some Muslims…I am not

going to rest until I find the person who is responsible. I’m going

to bring this country down…"(13)

Birmingham Repertory Theatre had to close it’s doors because Muslims, objecting to the performance of Kaur Bhatti’s play, Behzti, decide to riot. The theatre had to be evacuated and future performances were also cancelled. The playwrite went into hiding.(14)

DePaul University professor, Thomas Klocek, is suspended and subsequently dismissed from his post when Muslim students complain that he voiced the opinion that Israel had a right to exist as a State and disagreed with the notion that the Israeli treatment of Palestinians was akin to the Nazi treatment of Jews. (15)


Muslims get upset and complain because two Australian politicians, shortly after the riots in Sydney, asked that immigrants try to assimilate to Australian culture; try to "fit in better" in their communities and to shun extremism. Islamic leaders warned that such comments could lead to more rioting and violence and demanded an apology. To the credit of the politicians, there was no apology. (16)


The Passion of the Christ
and the children’s animated film, Prince of Egypt are censored in theatres and churches in Malaysia, a predominantly Muslim country, because they offend "the prophets" of Islam. Islam teaches that Moses was a prophet and that Christ was only a prophet. In both cases, Islam prohibits depictions of prophets. Copies of The Passion of the Christ had to be sold on the underground market in order for Christians to see it. (17)


Muslims are offended by "Jewish cookies" in Denmark and demand that the company producing the non-Kosher product change the name because the name offends them. The cookies aren’t called Jewish Cookies because they’re kosher. Jews in Denmark don’t even purchase them. Rather, it’s simply a name that was given to the cookie which is sold at Christmastime. (18)


Muslims are offended by two rap CDs sold in Thailand and demand the songs be pulled because they quote the Koran (well, maybe they are offensive after all?) The artists apologize to "all Muslims" for producing the CDs. (19)


Muslims became upset when a play by Voltaire, Fanatacism, or Mohamet the Prophet, and demanded that the play be cancelled. The play, which uses the example of Islam to lampoon all religious fanaticism, went on as planned, in spite of a minor riot. (20)

Muslim students try to get artwork by a Delta College student removed because it allegedly links Islam to violence and desecrated the Quran.

The piece, entitled Kalashnikov Jihad, featured an AK-47 (artificial one) covered in pages from the Quran. The piece wasn’t removed. (Side note: the flag of Hezbollah, whom many Muslims support, sports an AK-47 and Muslims don’t protest it.. hmm!) (21)


The Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) fusses about the frieze on the front of the Supreme Court House in Washington, D.C. They don’t like the fact that Mohammed is featured holding the Quran in his left hand, and a sword in his right hand. Spokesman, Ibrahim Hooper stated that they "have expressed the Muslim community’s concerns about a variety of images of the Prophet Mohammed…" The Court refused to remove it or alter it. However, the Court did change the literature which explains the carvings on the frieze. The literature no longer calls Mohammed the "founder" of Islam; instead it refers to him as "the prophet" of Islam. (22)


Muslims in the UK demand that "Holocaust Day" be changed to "Genocide Day" to include the mass murder of Muslims in Palestine, Chechneya and Bosnia, claiming that the name Holocaust Day is "racist" because it only marks the Jewish holocaust. (23)

Oriana Fallaci went on trial this year after an arrest in 2004 for "defaming Islam" in the book, Strength And Reason. Adel Smith, a Muslim activist filed a lawsuit alleging that the book contains, among other offensive statements, that Islam is "a pool…that never purifies." (24)


Coptic Christians in Alexandria come under fire for the showing of a play entitled I Was Blind But Now I Can See. Muslims gathered at the Saint George Coptic church by the thousands to protest the play and storm the Church. (26)


Novelty Pig calendars and toys are all banned from the Dudley Council office (West Midlands) because a Muslim complained about some piggy-shaped stress relievers which were handed out to workers. Also banned are tissue boxes which featured Winnie the Pooh and Piglet, too. (Is Miss Piggy going to get the axe next?) (27)

Have We Created Mohammestein?

I’m afraid that in our efforts to avoid the monster of unfairness, we have created another monster: Mohammestein.


Mohammestein strikes fear into the hearts of people, whether or not he tromps through their yard or darkens their door. The label of "racist" seems to have people running. In some cases this has led to pre-emptive political correctness:

 

Swedish home furnishings giant, IKEA, fears that ads of women assembling pre-fab furniture and cupboards may offend Muslims. So their instruction manuals feature only images which are obviously male or gender-neutral figures. (28)


Tate Gallery in London withdraws an exhibit item by John Latham entitled God Is Great even though the Muslim Council of Britain had stated that they received NO COMPLAINTS about the exhibit. The gallery cited concerns after the London bombing. (29)


Though no request (or shall I say, demand) was made by Muslims to remove them, banks in Britain have ceased a long-standing tradition of giving out piggy banks to encourage children to save their money. Why? Because the little porcelain piggies, which look nothing like a real pig and certainly aren’t edible, might have offended Muslims. (30)


British Midland International airlines, tells staff they may not bring bibles, teddy bears or other stuffed cuddle toys on board, wear crucifixes nor St. Christophers’ medals on flights to Saudi Arabia. Female airline staff were informed that they had to don the abaya once the planes landed in Saudi Arabia and that they must walk two steps behind their male co-workers. All so as to avoid offending Saudi Muslims. (31)


The title of a comedy movie about humor changed the name of the movie from Looking For Comedy in a Muslim World to Looking For Comedy because the film distributors didn’t want to offend Muslims. (32)


A little five year old girl’s passport is withheld because it is feared that her bare shoulders might offend Muslims. (33)

Islam is Offensive

Are you getting the idea here? Everything offends these people except their own religion, their own culture, and their own laws.


Well, they’re not the only apples on the tree. I am offended by certain things, too. And so are many other people in the world. Here’s what offends me:

I am offended by the silence of the majority of Muslims in the world when it comes to the comments of men like Ahmadinejad and others who call for the eradication of America and Israel.


I am offended by Muslims who enjoy the freedoms America has to offer, and yet stomp and burn the flag and yell "death to Americans" rather than get their butts back up in the air and thank their god, Allah, that they’re in a country where they won’t get tried and put to death for making such statements.


I am offended by muslimah’s who, though free to chose their clothing, seem to think they deserve special rights because of that choice. Cover your face if you want to; but don’t sue the state because it won’t issue you an identification card or driver’s license.


I am offended by the superiority complex of many Muslims who think their morals are somehow better than anyone else’s morals because they follow Mohammed. People were well behaved for Vlad the Impaler, too, but it doesn’t say much for his humanity.


I am offended that Muslims still read, disseminate, and believe in The Protocols of the Elders of Zion while at the same time, and without any shame, they attempt to rewrite everything from the holocaust to the founding of America.


I am offended that so many Muslims demand respect from the rest of the world while showing very little respect in return.


I am offended that in order for many Muslims to believe their religion is good and viable, they need to restrict, redefine, and demean the religions of everyone else.


I am offended that many Muslims feel they can riot and be violent over cartoons of their prophet and yet, in their own media, they think nothing of portraying Jews as Nazis and demons.


I am offended that many Muslims seem to think I would be happier in a Burka than in my blue jeans and tee-shirt. A tee-shirt that reads: Not in my Country, Not in my State, Not in my Neighborhood.


I have no problem with Muslims wanting to practice their faith in their own lands. But if they want to get along in America they need to wake up and realize that Americans will only take so much. We aren’t made for Islam, which means "submission".
 
Americans are cut of a much different cloth. We don’t like Kings and Princes. We don’t welcome the rule of potentates. We tossed tea over that issue and we fought a civil war among ourselves on the issue of states rights and freedom. We like our freedom, even though it isn’t always practiced well.


Islam, you may be able to pull it off in Europe, but we’re a whole other world here in the USA. I suggest you assimilate and stop whining. If you can’t do that, please go back to the Middle East, where you’ll be happier.


And, if you opt to go back, take Cindy Sheehan with you, ok? The woman could seriously use a burka.

 

 

 

EndNotes

(1) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jyllands-Posten_Muhammad_cartoons_controversy

(2) Remarks by Pope Prompt Muslim Outrage, Protests Washington Post, Sept. 16, 2006, section A01

(3) http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/540 Bounty Offered for Murdering Cartoonists Brussels Journal 12/04/2005 and the Daily Mail, http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=405622&in_page_id=1770

The Pope must die, says Muslim Sept. 18, 2006

(4) http://www.hatecrime.org/subpages/hatespeech/hate.html

(5) Capitalism Magazine, Hate is not a Crime, Carter Laren, October 24, 2002

(http://www.capmag.com/articlePrint.asp?ID=2024)

(6) ibid.

(7) Police blunder after 9/11 'destroyed pilot's career' London Times Online, Sept. 26, 2005 (example)

(8) 9/11: Five years later TYPECASTING MUSLIMS AS A RACE, Sunday, September 3, 2006 San Francisco Chronicle, http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/09/03/MNG4FKUMR71.DTL

(9) Main Entry: Mus·lim Pronunciation: 'm&z-l&m, 'mus-, 'muz-
Function: noun Etymology: Arabic muslim, literally, one who submits (to God)
1 : an adherent of Islam (courtesy Merriam-Webster online)

(10) Protesters Accuse Bush of 'Exterminating the Muslim Race' Marc Morano, CNSNews.com,
January 20, 2005 "In cold, snowy Washington, about a hundred protesters gathered outside the "Black Tie and Boots" inaugural ball on Wednesday night, comparing President George W. Bush to Adolf Hitler because Bush is "exterminating the Muslim race."

(11) Deseret News, June 4, 2005

(12) news.Scotsman.com Sept. 17., 2005, Burger King Recalls Sacrilegious Desserts

(13) harpers.org I’m Hatin It, interview with Rashad Akhtar, May 22, 2006

(14) December 28, 2004

(15) Thomas Klocek, July 2006

(16) CNS news, Sept. 5, 2006 Outrage As Australian Leaders Tell Muslims to Fit In

(17) AsiaNews.it Malaysian Muslims Offended by the Passion, April 5, 2004

(18) Ynetnews.com 12/07/05

(19) WorldWide Religious News, wwrn.org, Feb. 8, 2006, Muslims Offended By Rap Song

(20 post-gazette.com, March 6, 2006, Muslims Ask French to Cancel 1741 Play by Voltaire

(21) news10.net abc affiliate station, news 10, KXTV

(22) Middle-East-Online.com 8/2/2006 Muhammed Sculpture at Top of US Court draws rebuke from US Muslim Leaders

(23) ynetnews.com, Muslims Demand to Cancel Holocaust Day in UK Poses Threat to Western Values, 9/21/05

(24) jpost.com (Jerusalem Post), June 12, 2006, Italian Author to be Tried for Defaming Islam
(25) Al-Ahram Weekly, 27 Oct.-2 Nov. 2005, Calm Before the Storm

(26) The Sun, Sept. 21, 2006 thesun.co.uk

(27) MsMusings, Mar.10, 2005

(28) World Socialist Website, 12 Oct. 2005

(29) TheAge.com Oct. 24, 2005 Piggy Banks Offend Some UK Muslims

(30) WorldNetDaily.com Jan. 2006

(31) Distribution of the film was also inhibited because of concern over Muslim reactions. political gateway.com, Feb. 7, 2006; altmuslim.com, Movie Studio Not Amused By Muslim Themed Comedy Film

(32) daily mail.co.uk , Aug. 15, 2006

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

HOME GROWN TERRORISTS: who are they?

How do you identify a terrorist? Ask this of any man on the street and the responses will be determined by politics.

Those of a liberal bent will consider George Bush to be a terrorist. Those of a conservative bent will say Middle Eastern men. And others will shrug and say “anyone could become a terrorist.”

The last group is the correct group. “Reverts” to Islam aren’t usually men of “Arabic decent”. Jose Padilla is a man of Hispanic decent who converted to Islam while in prison for murder. 

Adam Gadahn isn’t of Arabic decent. He’s an American native (Azzam the American). His real name is Adam Pearlman, the product of a Jewish-Christian mixed family. 

Ernest Thompson became known as James Ujaama after his conversion to Islam. In 1999 this would-be terror cell founder tried to create a training camp in Oregon, complete with a stockpile of weapons.

Recently the New York Police Department issued a ninety page report detailing information about terrorists and terrorism as a threat to American safety. Critics claim the report is too broad, so much so that it may cause nationwide paranoia without offering us any solid information by which to defend ourselves.


The report discusses a trajectory, a pattern of increased exposure and identification, noted in many of the terror-related cases over the past ten years. This pattern alleges a four-tier profile of activity:


1) Pre-radical life. The person’s life before exposure to “radical Islam” is pretty much indistinguishable from that of anyone else.


2) Self-Identification. The person becomes influenced, either by internal or external mechanisms; they begin to explore “Salafi Islam”.


3) Indoctrination. The person believes or adopts the Jihadi-Salifi teaching.


4) Jihadization. The person accepts their individual duty and self-identifies as a holy warrior of the mujahadeen.


All of that sounds well and good. But the report makes a damning statement about identifying potential terrorists:


“There is no useful profile to assist law enforcement or intelligence to predict who will follow this trajectory of radicalization.”


Really? I think once we stop the shell game (and shed some political correctness) we may see that identifying potential terrorists may not be as difficult as we think.


A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME
Pardon me while I scoff and snort at those who would say Salafi is different from Wahhabism. Frankly, I don’t care if they find it offensive to be called Wahhabi. Salafi and Wahhabism are just two faces of the same coin.


Let’s follow the bunny trail.


Muhammed founded Islam. Keeping him company throughout his life were the Salaf, from which the name Salafi is derived. The Salaf were the ones who maintained the words of Mohammed and ultimately produced the Quran and the Hadith (along with the Sira and Tarikh). Since they were such close associates of Muhammed, we can assume they got things right.


In the 1700’s the Sunni patriarch, Muhammed Ibn Abd al-Wahhab began teaching the return to the original Islam as intended and recorded by the associates of Muhammed. Also known as the Salaf. Basically Wahhab taught that anything not officially mandated by Muhammed and Allah had no place in the Islamic belief. This meant a return to the Salaf. In other words: WAHABBISM is only the “pet” name or the derogatory name for Salafi Islam.


Distancing themselves from Osama bin Laden has been an on-going venture for Wahhabist Muslims. They say that bin Laden got his ideas from the writings of Sayyid Qutb, who visited the United States from 1958-1961 and, after having spent a whole three years here, came to the conclusion that our country was waging a moral war against Islam.


In a book called The Wahhabi Myth, the author tries to make this distinction:


“Bin Laden was not inspired by Wahhabism but by the writings of the Egyptian ideologue Sayyid Qutb, who was executed by President Nasser in 1966. Almost every fundamentalist movement in Sunni Islam has been strongly influenced by Qutb, so there is a good case for calling the violence that some of his followers commit Qutbian terrorism. Qutb urged his followers to withdraw from the moral and spiritual barbarism of modern society and fight it to the death.”


While Qutb’s writings no doubt encouraged bin Laden, ultimately the Quran and Hadith’s themselves would be the inspiration. To say that Salafi followers are practicing something that’s corrupted is creating a shell game. As noted on the Prophet of Doom website:


“In direct contradiction to all who apply the ‘radical’ label to the Islam of today's terrorists, the only way for Wahhab or Salaf Muslims to be practicing a corrupted version of Islam, is for Muhammad and his Companions to have gotten Islam wrong. And if that were true, the religion has no basis of any kind. The moment you come to grips with this simple, yet profound, truth, the connection between Islam and terror becomes clear.”


The clarity becomes frightening when one looks at from where the support for Wahhabist Islam cometh. And it begs the question: is our Government creating terror for us?


According to author Reza Safa, the government of Saudi Arabia has been importing Wahhabism to America and other countries to the tune of some $87 billion since 1973. Most of the “Islamicizing” of America comes from established organizations. The three most prominent are ISNA (the Islamic Society of North America); CAIR (Council on American Islamic Relations) and the MSA (Muslim Student Association).


Supporting organizations include: American Muslim Council (AMC); American Muslim Alliance (AMA); Muslim American Society (MAS); the Graduate School of Islamic and Social Sciences (GSISS); and the North American Islamic Trust (NAIT) which operates some 324 plus mosques nationwide. 

In 2003 Stephen Schwartz testified before the Senate Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology and Homeland Security as to the links between Wahhabism/Salafi Islam and Saudi connections and aspirations to inundate American society with “radical Islam.”

Schwartz mentioned the goals of the Saudi importation:

“First, to control a significant group of Muslim believers.


Second, to use the Muslim community in the U.S. to pressure U.S. government and media, in the formulation of policy and in perceptions about Islam…

Third, to advance the overall Wahhabi agenda of ‘jihad against the world’ — an extremist campaign to impose the Wahhabi dispensation on the global Islamic community, as well as to confront the other religions.”

That Salafi/Wahhabist Muslims outnumber all other groups in the US isn’t a fluke. Although very few will likely call themselves Wahhabi (because of the implied tie to bin Laden) the shell game comes into play when you hear a person say “I am not Salafi! I am not Wahhab! I am just Muslim!”


They’re right. They’re all branches of the same corrupt tree: Sunni Islam. And what is the predominant sect in Saudi Arabia? Sunni, with over 70% of it’s population practicing Sunni.

God bless our little government! This isn’t news to them. It’s also not news to them that the type of Islam endorsed by the Saudi government just so happens to be a “radical” type. From a State Department report circa 2005:


“The majority of citizens [in Saudi Arabia] are Sunni Muslims who predominantly adhere to the very strict Hanbali school of Islamic jurisprudence. The Hanbali school is the strictest of Sunni Islam’s four legal schools. In addition, most Sunnis in the Kingdom subscribe to the tradition of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, an 18th century Muslim scholar belonging to the Hanbali school. For this reason, these individuals are often referred to by others as ‘Wahhabis.’ Most citizens, however, do not so describe themselves, preferring instead to say simply that they are ‘Muslims.’”


Gee, go figure.


So what have we got here? We have the end result of what happens when expediency meets political correctness: the inability to detect terrorists in our midst.


WHO ARE THE TERRORISTS AMONG US?
In July of this year, the FBI announced that they were introducing the STAR system, a database which collects information and assesses the information as a sort of profile of would-be terrorists. The system focuses primarily on foreign suspects but does look at US residents as well.


And of course, nobody will be “labeled” a terrorist. Even if he has a stock-pile of AK-47’s in his trunk, a computer with a layout of Kennedy Airport on the hard drive, bank receipts from CAIR, and a card reading “72 Virgins await you in heaven” signed by bin Laden himself. No, we must not label anyone, right?


We also have political correctness at the expense of the average man’s security coming from the Bush administration’s liberal critics, such as Paddy O’Leahy, who seems to think the administration gives a damn about my personal life:


“The Bush administration has expanded the use of this technology, often in secret, to collect and sift through Americans' most sensitive personal information…”


Sift away! You’ll discover I’m in menopause, that I’m not in the $200K classification of the “wealthy”, and that Mom and I share female pattern baldness.


The report introduces some aspects of identifying those susceptible to becoming indoctrinated into “radical” Islam. First of all, they pinpoint that the most susceptible are those who are second and third generation Muslims living in the west who are trying to find their roots.

But these guys aren’t looking for Kunta Kintay. They’re looking back in time to Mohammed- at least as close as they can get to what their founder REALLY believed and taught. And this, at least in the west, takes them back to the Salaf, aka, Wahabbist teachings courtesy of Saudi-sponsored Mosques and educational centers.


The report also points out that these potential terrorists live in enclaves dominated by Islam. These enclaves are patriarchal in nature in terms of Islamic belief and practice. And to make it more interesting, there seems to be no relationship to poverty here. One would think a life of poverty could lead one to not mind committing suicide for Allah if life in the hereafter were going to be better.


But this isn’t the case. And recent events surrounding a group of doctors and physician assistants who conspired to attack the United States seems to buttress the conclusion of the NYPD report. Of course, that’s not to say that all of the terrorists we’ve seen to date are necessarily well educated and middle class. Potential terrorists may well be culled from the less affluent. Which suddenly makes one wonder: do we really have any tell-tale attributes?


The report whittles down some characteristics:
> They tend to be under 35
> They’re local residents and citizens of western democracies.
> Varied ethnic backgrounds, often 2nd and 3rd generation western.
> Middle class backgrounds; not destitute.
> Educated, at least High school graduates and/or college students.
> Recent converts to Islam are particularly vulnerable.
> Don’t start out as radical nor even devout Muslims.
> Unremarkable- have ordinary lives and jobs.
> Little if any criminal record.


Congratulations NYPD. You have just identified a huge hunk of young Muslim America as potential terrorists.


It’s important to remember that there are influences. While the report talks about personal influences, both internal and external, it also discusses such things as the influences of spiritual leaders. Of course we here in the US have this bad habit of shooting ourselves in the foot when it comes to “spiritual enemies.” We’d rather chase after Mel Gibson as an anti-semite than take a close look at some of the whacked out spiritual leaders here in the USA who are teaching crap to mush minds in our prisons, Mosques and yes, schools.


In the end, the report leaves us still wondering how in the world we can possibly pinpoint a would-be terrorist. With a majority of young Muslims fitting most or all of the above list, we are stymied: what if the terrorists decide to use older Muslims? Or children under age fifteen? Or women?


Let’s face it. We cannot possibly know who is, or is not, a potential terrorist until they get arrested for something. Or, until we get the gonads to actually start investigating- seriously investigating- NGO’s, bookstores, café’s, hookah bars, and internet café’s. We need to get the “Noble Quran” out of our schools and universities. And we need to start realizing that anyone who changes their name from Jack Smith to Muhammed Abd Bakiri is probably going to become an extremist.


Last, but not least, we need to realize that the Constitution protects the rights of those citizens who support it and defend it and those persons who abuse it’s existence in order to take over our nation and our lives.


And maybe, while we’re at it, we need to demand that our government stop sleeping with the enemy. Why in the world we tolerate the Saudi influence in America is beyond my comprehension. We’re supporting a country which violates human rights on more levels than can possibly be counted. A country which doesn’t afford Christians, Jews and other faiths the same freedom we afford Muslims to worship here in America. A country which backs and funds organizations known to be linked to terrorist organizations (can you say HOLY LAND FOUNDATION, CAIR, ISNA, NAIT?)


And for what? Some oil? Dancing girls? A lone military base in the middle of Camelass, Saudi Arabia?


America has been playing nice-nice with the House of Saud for fifty years. A 2000 report from the Middle East Policy Council makes it abundantly clear that our interests in Saudi Arabia have to change and change drastically. Where once we had a relationship with them which inhibited the propagation of Wahhabi/Salafi style Islam, now Saudi is the home base for it.

So how do we identify a potential terrorist in our midst? Simple: they’re a follower of Mohammed in the strictest sense. They’re Wahhabi-Salafi-Sunni and they’re funded by our dear friends, the Saudi government.


And we stupidly protect them.


SOURCES
daniel pipes

NYPD report

PEW research survey of American Muslims

Saudi Information

Sunni Information

Schwartz Testimony

Wahhabi Myth

MidEast Policy Council

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous1Next »