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Saturday, March 19, 2011

Reza Aslan on who to blame for talking about Islam

If you do not know Reza Aslan, it is time you met.  A fine apologist for Islam, excellent mud-slinger and occasional liar, Mr. Aslan is from Iran originally, his parents fled the 1979 Islamic revolution and ended up in the land of the free.  Reza seems not to hold any love for America, and practices taqiyya in defense of Islamic doctrine.

This article came out before the King hearing, and it assumes the outcome and the reasons behind the hearing based in nothing more than name-calling and empty accusations.

Reza Aslan is a voice of misdirection and spin, Islam style.


From The Washington Post March 11 by Reza Aslan

On Muslims, King has reached his own fact-less conclusion

Rep. Peter King (R-N.Y.), chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, will begin holding hearings Thursday on "the extent of the radicalization of American Muslims." Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations, has characterized the hearings as "a witch hunt." Are they?

King also has said he believes the "self-radicalization" of American Muslims represents "a very small minority" of the overall community. What are the potential consequences of singling out one religious group?

All one needs to know about what is behind the King hearings can be gleaned by Peter King's own statements regarding Muslims in the US.

How does Rep. King feel about Islam in the United States?

"Unfortunately, we have too many mosques in this country. There are too many people who are sympathetic to radical Islam. We should be looking at them more carefully. We should be finding out how we can infiltrate [them].

How does King know so much about radicalization in the US? From a single source more than decade ago.
"The only real testimony we have on it is from Sheikh Kabbani who was a Muslim leader during the Clinton Administration, he testified back in 1999 and 2000 before the State Department that he thought over 80 percent of the mosques in this country are controlled by radical Imams. Certainly from what I've seen and dealings I've had, that number seems accurate."
King's single source, Sheikh Kabbani, is a Sufi Muslim who has advocated for peace and tolerance in Islam but who by his own admission is not an authority on Islam in America and who has admitted to simply stating his personal opinion - an opinion that has been contradicted by both the FBI and by every scholar who has studied the matter. Oh, and by the way, Sheikh Kabbani has also claimed that any Muslim who advises the US government is also "an extremist." But King is not interested in facts. He just feels like it must be at least 80%.

That statement is a lie.  Kabbani researched 114 mosques in the US and I will bet Aslan has not done any kind of research as to the depth of jihadist preaching going on at mosques.  The Center for Religious Freedom, in 2005 and the Mapping Sharia Project in 2008 both showed in their studies that 80% of American mosques preached hatred of Jews and other non-Muslims, as well as promoting the need to impose sharia law.

"It was 80 percent back in 2000. Based on the radicalization since then, it has to be -- I have no doubt, I have problem at all in saying it's 85 percent. If it's not 85, it's still 80."

And King has reliable sources to back up his feeling.

"I can get you the documentation on that from experts in the field. Talk to a Steve Emerson... It's a real issue ... I'll stand by that number of 85 percent. This is an enemy living amongst us."

That's Steve Emerson, the "expert in the field" who has turned Islamophobia into a multi-million dollar career. Emerson has been caught in so many lies and distortions that the media watchdog group Fairness in Accuracy and Reporting (FAIR) has devoted an entire page to debunking his wild and exaggerated accusations. In an in-depth report of his writings, FAIR concludes that, "Emerson's willingness to push an extremely thin story--with potentially explosive consequences--is... consistent with the lengthy list of mistakes and distortions that mar his credentials as an expert on terrorism."

Of course, King could try to speak to American Muslims himself. But it seems he has already reached his own, fact-less conclusions.

"I think there's been a lack of full cooperation from too many people in the Muslim community. And it's a real threat here in this country." ... They won't turn in their own. They won't tell what's going on in the mosques. They won't come forward and cooperate with the police."

That comes as a surprise to the authorities King claims to be assisting with these hearings. "If he has evidence of non-cooperation, he should bring it forward," says Los Angeles County's Sheriff Lee Baca. "We have as much cooperation as we are capable of acquiring through public trust relationships."

Why the qualifier, Sheriff Baca?  Either you are not capable of acquiring all the intel you need, or the Muslim community is giving you only what they want to give.  Which is it, Sheriff?

Perhaps all of this explains why even conservative outlets like the National Interest have criticized King's hearings. The National Interest wrote, "The hearings should never take place, but if they do, the real promoter of anti-Americanism at home and abroad will be Rep. King."

The bottom line is that King's hearings were not about making Americans safer. They are about promoting his personal views about Islam and Muslims in the U.S. As such they lend false legitimacy to the anti-Islam hate groups that have flourished in the U.S. since 9/11. We saw a glimpse of this zealotry and hatred recently, when a large group of tea party protesters in Orange County surrounded a Muslim group's fundraiser yelling obscenities and shouting "Go Back Home!" to the Muslims walking to and from the event. The scene looked much like a chapter of American history that most Americans reflect on with shame. The fact that a representative of Congress held hearings that could lend legitimacy to this type of bigotry is shocking.

Attack and mislead, that is standard method for Islamists and jihadists.  If you cannot stand on truth, fight by slander.

Which is a worse form of bigotry; saying "go back home" or "Behead those who insult Islam"

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