they can talk but we can't? 

muslim get the empire state building and all the lights, and at the same time 
over a million are killed in combined iraq and afghanistan. some how those 
lights don't mean shit to me. i will choose the million lives, and hurl insults 
at the nazis who are holding islamophobic week.

Z T

Mubashir Inayet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Dear Ghazali
   
  Let them burn in their soup of hatred.
   
  I have news for them. 
   
  On Eid day, for the first time in US history Islam was acknowledged by 
lighting up Empire State Building. 
   
  Let them know as well, so they can further bite their nails in frustation!
   
  Mubashir

Abdus Sattar Ghazali <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  

  Islamophboia week at US campuses
  Spreading hatred under the guise of  patriotism
   
   
  By Abdus Sattar Ghazali
   
   
  Borrowing from President Bush’s terminology ‘Islamo-Fascists,’ a notorious 
band of ultra-right wing Arabphobes and Islamophobes is embarked on a new 
project to spread fear and hatred under the guise of patriotism and freedom. 
   
   
  Packaged as “Islamo-Fascist Awareness Week,” David Horowitz, a 
neo-conservative polemicist, is leading the Arab/Muslim-basing efforts at 
campuses across the nation.   
   
  In the past, David Horowitz, the self-appointed chief of the  new campus 
thought police, has organized witch-hunts against progressive academics and 
attempted to introduce legislation to enforce “codes of conduct” that would 
silence “left-wing” voices on campus. This time his target of the Oct. 22-26 
Islamo-Fascist Week are Islam and Arabs/Muslims.
   
  Horowitz asks students participating in the campaign to disseminate 
presentations, such as “The Islamic Mein Kampf,” (meaning the Quran). He also 
tries to connect Islam with fascism and Arabs and Muslims with Nazis.  He 
proclaimed that Palestinians are the “quintessential Islamo-Fascists” and that 
their cause is “genocidal.” 
   
  Horowitz’s personal Web site is home to comments such as, “There is no 
distinction in the American Muslim community between peaceful Muslims and 
jihadists,” and, “Put a complete stop to Muslim  immigration, and find creative 
ways to deport all Muslim non-citizens. These two measures would be accompanied 
by the creation of an environment where the practice of Islam is made not easy 
but difficult.” 
   
  Tellingly, Horowitz’s mission is not much different than another Islamophobe 
group known with the acronym SANE: the Society of Americans for National 
Existence that seeks to banish Islam from the US by making "adherence to Islam" 
punishable by 20 years in prison. It also seeks a ban on Muslim immigration to 
the US.
   
  A petition from the so-called David Horowitz Freedom  Center demands that 
“students and faculty...declare their allegiances: either to fighting our 
terrorist adversaries or failing to take action to stop our enemies.” In a 
throwback to McCarthyism, right-wing students are encouraged to issue press 
releases condemning those who refused to sign. It means either you are with us 
or with our enemy.
   
  But just who are the “Islamic fascists? According to Horowitz’s FrontPage 
magazine, they include the Muslim Student Association, which has chapters on 
hundreds of U.S. campuses--and the Council on American Islamic Relations, which 
advocates for civil rights and tracks hate crimes against Arabs and Muslims.
   
  As part of the  "Islamo-Fascism Week," Horowitz visited  Princeton 
University, New Jersey, on Oct. 16,  the last day of Eid al-Fitr, the holy 
Muslim holiday celebrating the end of the month of Ramadan. Interestingly, due 
to his less-than-gleaming reputation, the event had to be kept somewhat of a 
secret.
   
   
  In his tirade against Muslims he persistently connected the religion of over 
1.5 billion people to fascism, lumping together a diverse array of ethnic and 
political groups by using terms such as "Islamic Nazis," "barbarians" and 
"Islamo-fascism." Alarmingly, Horowitz made the claim that groups like al Qaeda 
and Hamas are comparable to American organizations such as the Council on 
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the Muslim Students Association (MSA).
   
   
  Perhaps unknowingly, Horowitz negated his own claims by citing an inaccurate 
and selective history of the Middle East. He denied that the Arab-Israeli 
conflict centers on the issue of land and state and insisted that no 
Palestinian lands had ever been annexed. He also made the apocalyptic statement 
that Christians in the Middle East are "vanishing," a startling claim 
considering the existence of over 8 million Coptic Christian Egyptians, 1.4 
million Lebanese Christians and 300,000 Christians in the West Bank.
   
  There is a collection of bigots and crackpots that Horowitz has recruited to 
speak for Islamophobia week.
   
  Ann Coulter is one. After September 11, she was fired from her job at the 
highly  conservative National Review for her comment that the U.S. “should 
invade [Muslim] countries, kill their leaders and convert them to 
Christianity.” In 2004, on Fox’s Hannity and Colmes, Coulter reiterated her 
stance. When asked if she would still “like to convert these people all to 
Christianity,” Coulter replied, “The ones that we haven’t killed, yes.” “So no 
one should be Muslim?” Alan Colmes asked. “They should all be Christian?” 
Coulter replied, “That would be a good start, yes.”
   
  Other luminaries include: Rick Santorum, a former US Senator, who has 
compared homosexuality to incest; Robert Spencer who claims Islam is "the 
world's most intolerant religion"; and noted anti-Arab commentator and 
Islamophobe Daniel Pipes who once said that "Palestinians are a miserable 
people…and they deserve to be." 
   
  Some other well-known Islamophobist speakers are: Dennis Prager, Sean Hannity 
and Wafa Sultan. More intellectual takes will come from such neoconservative 
icons of Middle East policy as Michael Ledeen who seeks to apply Machiavellian 
principles to the modern world: if we win, everyone will judge our methods to 
have been appropriate; if we lose, they will despise us. Strike decisively, get 
it over with quickly. The diplomats will always say that we can achieve our 
goals with a little bit of nastiness and a whole lot of talking, but they are 
wrong. It is better to be feared than loved.
   
  Surely such a notorious lineup of racist, bigoted, Islamophobic, anti-Semitic 
and Machiavellian speakers will serve not to educate but to promote hatred and 
spread misinformation and lies. 
   
  Let us not forget that these are the same lies that have lead, and continue 
to lead, to hate crimes and attacks against minorities including 
African-Americans, Jews, Muslims, homosexuals, and others based on stereotypes. 
   
  Events such as Islamophobia week do not seek to further the discussion in a 
peaceful manner, but rather contribute to the prejudicial anger and hatred 
targeted against Arabs and Muslims in the US. The post-9/11 America has seen a 
dramatic increase in hate crimes targeted against Arabs and Muslims or those 
perceived to be so. It has already been well-documented that the Arab-American 
and Muslim-American communities and anyone perceived to be a member of the 
communities have been the targets of  hate crimes and discrimination. The FBI 
has reported that such crimes increased by a reported 1,600 percent after the 
horrific terrorist acts of Sept. 11. 
   
  For a sign of how easily rhetoric about the Middle East can escalate, 
consider George Washington University, where authorities discovered hundreds of 
posters last week that said: “Hate Muslims? So do we!” A “typical Muslim” is 
then portrayed, with features identified such as “venom from mouth” and 
“suicide vest.” 
   
  Surely this event is a celebration of hate speech and intolerance in order to 
promote hate and bigotry. It will be an opportunity to Arab/Muslim-bashing 
under the auspices of “fighting terrorism.”
   
  Abdus Sattar Ghazali is the Executive Editor of the online magazine American 
Muslim Perspective: www.amperspective.com email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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