http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=26388

 


The Anti-Profiling Agenda

 

By Robert Spencer <http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/authors.asp?ID=1240>

FrontPageMagazine.com 

Representative Keith Ellison (D-MN) has been
<http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/news/politics/16427461.htm> named
to the House Judiciary Committee. Ellison said in a statement: "I look
forward to pursuing a progressive agenda in the committee, including the
restoration of American citizen's civil liberties that have come under
increasing attack over the past six years." 

The American citizens Ellison, the nation's first Muslim congressman, has in
mind are likely Muslims who charge that they have been subjected to unjust
scrutiny and inconvenience in the aftermath of 9/11. House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi (D-CA) shares this view: she has
<http://www.investors.com/editorial/editorialcontent.asp?secid=1501&status=a
rticle&id=247968254375265>  announced her intention to "correct the Patriot
Act," and wants to criminalize scrutiny of Muslims at airports and
elsewhere: "Since September 11, many Muslim Americans have been subjected to
searches at airports and other locations based upon their religion and
national origin. We must make it illegal." Helping make it illegal with
Ellison on the House Judiciary Committee will be John Conyers (D-MI), the
new chairman of that committee. "The policies of the Bush administration,"
he
<http://www.investors.com/editorial/editorialcontent.asp?secid=1501&status=a
rticle&id=247968254375265>  has declared, "have sent a wave of fear through
our immigrant communities and targeted our Arab and Muslim neighbors."

 

Pelosi, Conyers, and Ellison by all appearances seem less concerned about
any wave of fear that may be sent through American non-Muslims by continued
jihad terror activity on American soil. But just this week there have been
numerous indications that that jihad activity is continuing:

 

[1] Talib Abu Salam ibn Shareef (Derrick Shareef), a convert to Islam, pled
not guilty Tuesday to plotting a terrorist attack against a shopping mall in
Rockford, Illinois. As they were discussing his plans before his arrest,
Shareef <http://www.suntimes.com/news/metro/203599,rockford010907.article>
told an undercover agent: "Any place that's crowded, like a mall is good,
anything, any government facility is good. I swear by Allah man, I'm down
for it too, I'm down for the cause, I'm down to live for the cause and die
for the cause, man." What cause? In a videotaped
<http://www.suntimes.com/news/165607,1208_terror.article>  statement
discovered after his arrest, Shareef tied his plans explicitly to his
Islamic faith: "I am from America, and this tape is to let you guys know,
who disbelieve in Allah, to let the enemies of Islam know, and to let the
Muslims alike know that the time for jihad is now...be strong, oh
Mujahideen...May Allah protect me on this mission we conduct...so do not
cry, do not mourn for me."

 

[2] Mohammed Yousuf Mullawala, a Muslim citizen of India, is
<http://www.projo.com/news/content/DRIVER_PROBE9_01-09-07_AG3PUO3.2f614be.ht
ml>  the subject of a continuing investigation in Rhode Island after
enrolling in a truck driving school, inquiring about getting a permit to
carry hazardous materials, and telling instructors that he did not need to
learn how to back up. Also, Rhode Island State Police Major Steven O'Donnell
revealed that "we've tied some of his cell-phone records to people of
interest nationally" - that is, people who are suspected of terrorist
activity. "They're not your typical person's cell-phone history . the volume
of contacts obviously raises the level of suspicion." Referring to
Mullawala's own possible connection to jihad terror activity, O'Donnell
said: "We don't know whether he's a major player, a minor player, or any
type of player. But the indicators lead us to believe that his behavior is
not normal."

 

[3] Imam Fawaz Damra, the former leader of the largest mosque in Cleveland,
was
<http://www.cleveland.com/newslogs/plaindealer/index.ssf?/mtlogs/cleve_plain
dealer/archives/2007_01.html#222015>  deported to the West Bank last
Thursday. When he arrived, Israeli
<http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070109/ap_on_re_mi_ea/israel_imam_held>
authorities promptly arrested him for his ties to the terrorist group
Palestinian Islamic Jihad. His failure to disclose those ties got him
deported in the first place. He was also captured
<http://www.jihadwatch.org/archives/007385.php>  on videotape telling
<http://www.jihadwatch.org/archives/002058.php>  an Islamic audience that
"the first principle is that terrorism, and terrorism alone, is the path to
liberation.. If what they mean by jihad is terrorism, then we are
terrorists" - despite
<http://counterterror.typepad.com/the_counterterrorism_blog/2005/07/the_amer
ican_is.html>  having been a signer of the Fiqh Council of North America's
much lionized condemnation of terrorism. 

 

[4] On Monday, a Pakistani Muslim, Shahawar Matin Siraj, was sentenced to
<http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/nation/4455795.html>  thirty years
in prison for his plan to blow up a Manhattan subway station.

 

[5] Last Friday in <http://cbs2.com/topstories/local_story_001172325.html>
Palm Springs, a man named Haider Mohammad, who claimed to be an Al-Qaeda
operative, was arrested in a bar after threatening to "kill all Jews."

 

And that's just in the last couple of weeks. In light of these and other
cases, are law enforcement officials not justified in directing particular
scrutiny at Muslims? After all, neither the American Muslim community nor
any other has pronounced takfir on Osama bin Laden or any other jihadist
individual or group. (Takfir is an Islamic practice akin to excommunication,
involving the declaration that a particular Muslim is actually an
unbeliever.) Jihadists move more or less freely among peaceful Muslims
worldwide, and those peaceful Muslims have mounted no large-scale, organized
attempt to wrest the intellectual and theological initiative away from the
jihadists. In light of this, and of the jihadists' copious and consistent
use of Islamic teaching to justify their actions and make new recruits, it
would be foolish in the extreme to outlaw, as Pelosi, Conyers, and Ellison
wish to do, what is known as "religious profiling." 

 

Would we really all be safer if the one and only element that is common to
all jihad attackers - a devout attachment to Islam - were ruled out of
bounds as an object of consideration by law enforcement officials? The
anti-profiling initiative that is sure to begin soon will necessarily be
predicated on the proposition that there is no more reason to be concerned
about devout Muslims than about devout Presbyterians or devout Amish. 

 

Unfortunately, the evidence leads in exactly the opposite direction.



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