Saturday, December 16, 2006

Christians call for killing of Muslim Children

'KILL ALL MUSLIM KIDS' HATE SITE SHUT DOWN - TOPCAIR-Tampa welcomes decision by web hosting company(TAMPA, FL, 12/15/06) - The Tampa, Fla., office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-Tampa) announced today that an Internet web hosting company in that state has shut down a hate site that supported killing "all Muslim kids."Hostgator.com removed the site in response to a request by CAIR-Tampa. The Boca Raton-based company also informed the Islamic civil rights and advocacy group that the website has been suspended permanently.View a screen shot of the "kill all Muslim kids" posting:
http://www.cairfl.org/tampa/images/rwh/rightwinghowler-kill-all-muslim-kids01.jpg
Other entries on the site contained obscene and hate-filled attacks on Islam and Muslims, as well as support for other violent actions.One entry stated: "It's bad enough some [expletive deleted] in Minnesota elect a Muslim to Congress but the people in Michigan might have done them one better. . .Start sticking [sic] up on guns and ammo. The war will start soon.""We commend Hostgator.com for doing the right thing by refusing to associate with those who spew anti-Muslim bigotry and support calls to violence," said CAIR-Tampa Executive Director Ahmed Bedier. "We believe hate-filled rhetoric is a major contributing factor to bias crimes and prejudice."Bedier said CAIR will continue to monitor Internet hate sites based in Florida.CAIR, America's largest Islamic civil liberties group, has 32 offices and chapters nationwide and in Canada. Its mission is to enhance the understanding of Islam, encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties, empower American Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice and mutual understanding.

Friday, December 08, 2006

Christian man stalks family

MAN IS HELD FOR STALKING MUSLIM - TOP http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061206/NEWS/61206023A 32-year-old Guilford man has been arrested and accused of stalking and threatening to kill a family of Muslims that he believed were plotting a terrorist attack.The family the man is accused of targeting lives in Dummerston and owns a Brattleboro business. Authorities said the man's suspicions are baseless.Kyle A. Thurber was arrested Dec. 1 after waiting with a loaded rifle outside the workplace of two Muslim men, police said. Thurber, who has known the men for many years, told police they were terrorists planning to attack the United States.Thurber apparently has been living out of his car in the Brattleboro area and is undergoing a mental health evaluation, said David Gartenstein, the deputy state's attorney for Windham County.Thurber pleaded innocent Monday in Brattleboro District Court to two felony counts of aggravated stalking with a deadly weapon. He faces up to 10 years in prison and $50,000 in fines if convicted.In court documents, Brattleboro Police accuse Thurber of stalking the family over a three-day period, beginning Nov. 29 when he allegedly gunned his car outside their residence in Dummerston, spinning the tires, and then drove on their driveway and lawn.They told police Thurber stalked them again the next day at their Brattleboro business. Thurber confronted one of the men and said he wanted to talk with him and with his son; Thurber left "frustrated" after the man told him his son had called in sick, court documents state.Employees of the business said Thurber had been waiting in the company's parking lot since 6:30 a.m. that day. The confrontation with Thurber occurred at about 10:30 a.m.Fearing for his family's safety, the man hired an off-duty Brattleboro Police officer to guard the office and moved his family to a seasonal home in New Hampshire. Police said Thurber tried and failed to enter the business at about 10 a.m. Nov. 31. The doors had been locked. Police said that when they arrived to question Thurber, he told them he had a job interview.Police searched his car and found a Remington 7600 rifle and ammunition, according to records.Thurber told police members of the family, who are Palestinian, were plotting to blow up the north end of Brattleboro and possibly the Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant in Vernon. He said he was suspicious because they frequently spoke Arabic to each other.Thurber told police he planned to assault family members but did not want to kill them because he didn't want to go to prison. Still, police allege, he repeatedly made threats against their lives."Thurber stated that he thought the [family] should no longer be able to breathe," Brattleboro Police Officer Mark Carignan wrote in his affidavit. "He said that they needed to be killed to protect the United States." (MORE)SEE ALSO:

Christians unleash hate e-mails

LAWSUIT SAYS NYPD ANTI-TERROR CYBER UNIT FILLED WITH MUSLIM HATE - TOP Larry Neumeister, Associated Press, 12/5/06
http://www.newsday.com/news/local/newyork/ny-bc-ny--terror-biassuit1205dec05,0,1286841.story
A celebrated police anti-terrorism cyber unit became a beehive of anti-Muslim rhetoric after a city consultant unleashed hundreds of hateful e-mails saying Muslims and Arabs were all potential terrorists, a unit member said in a lawsuit Tuesday.The Department of Correction lieutenant, listed as John Doe Anti-Terrorism Officer on the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, said he was subjected to a hostile work environment, great emotional anguish, public humiliation and illegal retaliation.The Egyptian-born man asked for unspecified damages, saying he had suffered severe emotional distress, mental anguish, depression, physical injuries, illness, loss of pay and benefits and loss of advancement opportunities as a member of the elite anti-terror unit.The man, described in the lawsuit as "a proud Arab-American, a practicing Muslim and a patriot," blamed the city for failing to respond to his repeated complaints about the contractor, who was alleged to have sent e-mails saying "Burning the hate-filled Koran should be viewed as a public service at the least" and "Without Islam, there wouldn't be any Islamic terror."He said the hateful rhetoric, unchecked by supervisors, infected the workplace, where other employees felt comfortable making anti-Muslim comments and jokes and where a high-ranking police official thought it was OK to say, "All Arabs are animals."A city law office spokeswoman, Connie Pankratz, said city attorneys were aware of the case and were reviewing the papers Tuesday. (MORE)

Extremists attack Quran

PRAGER CONTINUED TO BASELESSLY ATTACK MUSLIM REP.-ELECT - TOP Media Matters, 12/5/06
http://mediamatters.org/items/200612060001
On the December 4 edition of MSNBC's Tucker, conservative radio host and Townhall.com columnist Dennis Prager continued to accuse incoming Rep. Keith Ellison (D-MN) of "imperil[ing]" America because of Ellison's reported intention to use a copy of the Quran during the ceremonial photo op on the day he is sworn in. Prager acknowledged, as the weblog Think Progress reported, that Ellison would use the Quran for "a photo op" and not the actual swearing-in, which is conducted in a large group. Ellison is the first Muslim ever elected to Congress. (MORE)---OLBERMANN: SAVAGE "WORST PERSON" RUNNER-UP FOR ATTACK ON ELLISON - TOP Media Matters, 12/5/06
http://mediamatters.org/items/200612060002
On the December 4 edition of MSNBC's Countdown, host Keith Olbermann awarded nationally syndicated radio host Michael Savage runner-up in his nightly "Worst Person in the World" segment for asking -- as Media Matters for America documented -- in response Rep.-elect Keith Ellison's (D-MN) reported intention to use a copy of the Quran during the ceremonial photo op on the day he is sworn in: "What's next, a witch gets elected, and she says she's only going to be sworn in with her hand over a pentagram?" Olbermann then observed that "members of Congress are not officially sworn in on a Bible, a Quran, or even a copy of the Worst Person in the World book." Savage is a frequent honoree during Olbermann's "Worst Person" segment and recently received "worst person" honors for claiming that his anti-gay comments would appear "in several of the blogs run by gays -- and they think only of that 'cause they're like drug addicts," as Media Matters also noted. (MORE)---MN: WORRY ABOUT THE OATH, NOT THE BOOK - TOP St. Paul Pioneer Press, 12/6/06
http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/news/editorial/16171052.htm
Allow us to interrupt a swell food fight over U.S. Rep.-elect Keith Ellison and his official swearing-in with a fact.No Good Book is required by the United States government for a person to take the oath of office and become a member of Congress. Members raise their hands together on the House floor on the first day of the session and are sworn in by the speaker of the House.So, the coast-to-coast gyrations over whether Ellison, a Minneapolis Democrat whose Muslim faith is a first for a member of Congress, should use the Quran instead of the Bible is a fight over symbolism, not law and policy.It is a fight over a photo opportunity.Ellison's Muslim faith was a complicating factor in his difficult race to succeed retiring U.S. Rep. Martin Sabo. Ellison, a lawyer who has served in the Minnesota House for four years, won despite his unpaid parking tickets, his dalliance with the Nation of Islam and his failure to file campaign finance documents on time.Shortly after winning, he told the Star Tribune newspaper that he planned to use the Quran, Islam's holy book, at his swearing-in. In a later interview with the Minnesota Monitor blog, he said: "The Constitution guarantees for everyone to take the oath of office on whichever book they prefer. And that's what freedom of religion is all about.'' His office could not be reached to comment further.An influential conservative talk-radio host, Dennis Prager, wrote on the townhall.com blog last week: "When all elected officials take their oaths of office with their hands on the very same book, they all affirm that some unifying value system underlies American civilization. If Keith Ellison is allowed to change that, he will be doing more damage to the unity of America and to the value system that has formed this country than the terrorists of 9-11.''Whoa.Salley Collins, press secretary for the U.S. House Committee on House Administration, said the official swearing-in does not involve a good book of any kind. Next Jan. 4, she said, the newly elected speaker, expected to be Nancy Pelosi, of California, will ask all members to raise their right hands and take the oath. (MORE)

Monday, December 04, 2006

Flying While Muslim

AZ MUSLIMS PROTEST REMOVAL OF MUSLIM CLERICS FROM FLIGHT - TOP http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-HyPC99du
SEE ALSO:VIDEO: IMAMS PULLED OFF PLANE - TOPNBC Nightly News with Brian Williams, 11/21/06

http://video.msn.com/v/us/msnbc.htmg=df5dd736f12b4b6d9d0ff662045b7797&f=00&fg=copy Nov. 21: The Council on American-Islamic Relations called Tuesday for an investigation into the behavior of airline staff and airport security in the removal of six Muslim scholars from a US Airways flight a day earlier. NBC's Pete Williams reports.---VIDEO: CAIR REP DEBATES 'FLYING WHILE MUSLIM' ON MSNBC'S 'TUCKER' - TOP
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tWx7d77_IPo
---CAIR-AZ CALLS FOR INVESTIGATION AFTER IMAMS DETAINED - TOPKNXV ABC 15, 11/21/06
http://g6publish.videodome.com/physorg/portal/?channel=USA+News&clipid=92544
---CAIR: SOME MUSLIMS CALL AIRPORT DETENTION BIAS - TOP Joshua Freed, Associated Press, 11/22/06
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/16069916.htm
The police report listed the incident as "Security-Other," but some saw the detention of six imams at the airport here as a case of "Flying while Muslim" - the idea that Muslims come in for extra scrutiny when they fly.The imams were removed from the flight to Phoenix on Monday night after three of them said their normal evening prayers in the terminal in Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport before boarding, said Omar Shahin, president of the North American Imams Federation, who was one of the passengers removed. The passengers were among 150 imams who attended a federation meeting in Minneapolis."It's discrimination," Shahin said, calling for a boycott of US Airways.It was just the latest incident in which passengers who were Muslim or, in some cases, just not Caucasian were removed from a flight for questioning. In August, a flight from Amsterdam to Mumbai was escorted back to the airport by F-16 fighters because a group of Indians on the plane had a large number of cell phones, notebook computers and hard drives, and refused to follow the crew's instructions."In this country, there was a time that Catholics were profiled, and they were stereotyped and discriminated (against), and Jewish people," said Dr. Shahid Athar, a professor at the Indiana University School of Medicine, who also writes and lectures on Muslim interaction in the West. "It looks like it is our turn now."In the incident Monday, a passenger reported overhearing the imams criticize the U.S. in Iraq and speaking angrily near the gate. The men were interrogated by the FBI and the Secret Service. They had to fly a different airline out of town on Tuesday after US Airways refused to let them on any of its flights."Unfortunately, this is a growing problem of singling out Muslims or people perceived to be Muslims at airport, and it's one that we've been addressing for some time," said Ibrahim Hooper, a spokesman for the Council on American-Islamic Relations. The group planned to file a complaint over the incident, Hooper said.Nihad Awad, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said the group has been receiving more reports of profiling. (MORE)---CAIR: 6 IMAMS REMOVED FROM FLIGHT FOR BEHAVIOR DEEMED SUSPICIOUS - TOP Libby Sander, New York Times, 11/22/06

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/22/us/22muslim.html
Six Muslim religious leaders were taken off a US Airways flight in Minneapolis on Monday evening and detained for several hours after some passengers and crew members complained of behavior they deemed suspicious, including prayers at the gate.The incident prompted the Council on American-Islamic Relations and officials for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in Washington to call Tuesday for Congressional hearings on racial profiling and an investigation by the Justice Department and the Transportation Security Administration.Nihad Awad, executive director of the Islamic advocacy group, said this was hardly the first time Muslims had encountered problems with stereotyping by the airline. "We seem to have received more complaints against US Airways" than other carriers, Mr. Awad said in an interview. Those complaints have come from Muslim employees and passengers alike, he said.Morgan Durrant, a US Airways spokesman, said the airline was investigating the episode. But he said the crew had acted in accordance with the company's policy for removing passengers, though he declined to give specifics on the policy.The six men detained, all imams, had attended a Minneapolis conference of the North American Imams Federation. They were handcuffed by the police and led off the flight, bound for Phoenix, after reports from passengers and crew members of "unsettling" behavior, according to a police report. One passenger had slipped a note to a flight attendant that began, "6 suspicious Arabic men on plane," the report said.After being detained for five hours and questioned separately by federal agents, all six men were released, said Patrick Hogan, a spokesman for Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.One of the six, Omar Ahmad Shahin of Phoenix, said he had been questioned for less than a half-hour. "This is the humiliation," said Dr. Shahin, 45. "They found nothing. They found we had a good relation with everybody." (MORE)---AIRLINE CHECKS CLAIM OF 'MUSLIM WHILE FLYING' DISCRIMINATION - TOP CNN, 11/21/06
http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/11/21/passengers.removed/
MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota (CNN) -- US Airways said Tuesday it is investigating the removal of six Muslim imams who were passengers on a Monday flight heading to Phoenix, Arizona.The clerics, who had been in Minnesota for a national imams conference, were guilty of nothing more than "flying while Muslim," according to a national Muslim advocacy group.The alert was raised after the men performed their normal evening prayers in the airport terminal before boarding Flight 300.A passenger who had seen them pray passed a note expressing concern to a flight attendant, US Airways spokeswoman Andrea Rader told The Associated Press.The passenger thought the imams -- who were speaking in Arabic and English -- had made anti-U.S. statements before boarding and "made similar statements while boarding," said Russ Knocke, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security.Once on board, Knocke said, the six split up into groups of two and did not sit in their assigned seats.US Airways had the imams removed from the plane, and according to the Council on American-Islamic Relations, a Muslim advocacy group, the airline denied the clerics access to another flight and did not assist them in obtaining tickets on another carrier."This discrimination should not stand," said Nihad Awad, the council's executive director. "We call on religious communities, civil rights movements and other people to stand up and speak up."He said the group was getting more reports of 'flying while Muslim' and racial profiling incidents across the country."We are concerned that crew members, passengers and security personnel may have succumbed to fear and prejudice based on stereotyping of Muslims and Islam," Awad said in an earlier press release calling for an investigation. (MORE)---CAIR-AZ: VALLEY MUSLIMS SAY PRAYER GOT THEM KICKED OFF FLIGHT - TOP Michael Kiefer, Arizona Republic, 11/22/06
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/1122imams1122.html
Minutes after their flight arrived at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on Tuesday afternoon, five Valley Muslim leaders announced that they had not been acting suspiciously before they were removed from a US Airways flight in Minneapolis."The crime we did?" said Omar Shahin, one of the five. "That we perform our prayer."Meanwhile, a national Islamic civil rights group asked for an investigation into the questioning of the imams in Minnesota, saying that the incident was the result of "prejudice and ignorance, not by real evidence of a threat to passenger safety." advertisementShahin is the imam, or leader, of the Arizona Cultural Academy, a mosque and Islamic religious school in Phoenix.The five men, several of whom are well-known in the Phoenix interfaith community, said that they were taken from the plane Monday because they are Muslim."I'm not asking the people to love my religion," said Marwan Sadeddin, imam at the Islamic Community Center of Phoenix, "I'm asking the people to respect the Constitution of the United States that says I have the freedom of religion, the freedom of belief."Meanwhile, US Airways says it is looking into the incident."At this point, we're standing by what our employees did," said Phil Gee, a US Airways spokesman. "We're going to investigate to make sure what our employees did was proper. Certainly, they were removed for a reason."The five imams - Shahin, Sadeddin, Ahmed Shqueirat, Didwar Faja and Mahmoud Sulaiman - were in Minneapolis for a meeting of the North American Imam Federation, of which Shahin is chairman.According to Mohammed AbuHannoud, civil rights director for the Phoenix office of the Council of American-Islamic Relations, the subject of the conference was outreach to the American community. U.S. Rep. Keith Ellison, D-Minn., the first Muslim elected to Congress, attended the conference.The national Islamic civil rights group called for an investigation into the incident."CAIR is receiving more reports of 'flying while Muslim' and racial-profiling incidents from members of the Islamic community nationwide," said Nihad Awad, executive director of the Council of American-Islamic Relations. "We therefore call for congressional hearings to deal with the issue of racial, religious and ethnic profiling in our nation's airports." (MORE)---CAIR: UPROAR FOLLOWS IMAMS' DETENTION - TOP The removal of six Muslim clerics from a US Airways flight from the Twin Cities set off a nationwide uproar, and the Department of Homeland Security's Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties said it will review the incident.Bob Von Sternberg and Pamela Miller, Minneapolis Star Tribune, 11/21/06
http://www.startribune.com/462/story/826056.html
From now on, Omar Shahin won't be praying at the airport while waiting for a flight."This was humiliating, the worst moment of my life," Shahin said Tuesday, a day after he and five fellow Muslim imams were escorted off a US Airways jet at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport."To practice your faith and pray is a crime in America?" he said.The incident set off a nationwide uproar, and the Department of Homeland Security's Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties said it will review the incident.Bloggers and talk radio buzzed about the need to be vigilant against potential terrorists, while civil rights advocates and Muslim leaders cried foul. The national Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) called for a congressional hearing about ethnic and religious profiling at airports.Locally, the Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas and the Somali Justice Advocacy Center questioned the detention.Bushra Khan, spokeswoman for CAIR's Arizona chapter, said, "All these men did was pray, and it was misunderstood. The bottom line is that they were Middle Eastern-looking men ... and that scares some people." (MORE)---CAIR: 'FLYING WHILE MUSLIM' - TOP For crews, it's safety firstDavid Hanners and Emily Gurnon, Pioneer Press, 11/22/06

http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/news/local/16071831.htm

When six imams were kicked off a Twin Cities flight and barred from another, a wave of outrage and cries of religious discrimination followed.Taken individually, the things the six men did - praying, talking about Iraq, asking for seat-belt extensions - may have passed without notice.But their behavior Monday night at Gate C9 at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport was enough to trigger one airline passenger to jot a two-sentence note that would get the men kicked off one flight and eventually barred from another.It also brought in the FBI and U.S. Secret Service, launched a federal investigation, prompted cries of religious discrimination, forced an airline to review its policies and spurred a call for a boycott of the nation's sixth-largest air carrier."The police came and took us off the plane in front of all the passengers in a very humiliating way," said one of the men, Omar Shahin, president of the North American Imams Federation.Nihad Awad, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, the nation's largest Islamic civil liberties group, said the detention of the imams was the result of prejudice and there was never a threat to passenger safety."CAIR is receiving more reports of 'flying while Muslim' and racial profiling incidents from members of the Islamic community nationwide," he said.Awad called for congressional hearings into the issue. (MORE)

Pig races

TX: PIG RACE PLAN LEADS TO DIRTY ARGUMENT - TOP Upset by moves of a Katy Islamic group, shop owner nearby will hold weekly contestsALLAN TURNER, Houston Chronicle

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/life/religion/4373941.html

All snout and tail, the pink and brown pigs contentedly rooting in the wire pen behind Craig Baker's stone shop seem piggishly comic. They're racing pigs, after all, and that's got to be funny.But few in the sprawling subdivisions along Baker Road are laughing.These pigs are subtle weapons, here to show the new neighbors - the Katy Islamic Association - they aren't entirely welcome. Tension has been growing in this west Harris County community since September when the Muslim group announced it had purchased 11 acres south of Interstate 10 to build a mosque, school, community center and athletic facilities. (MORE)

Mosques experience violence

MOSQUES IN U.S. THAT HAVE EXPERIENCED VIOLENT OR RACIST INCIDENTS - TOP Sheila Musaji, The American Muslims, 11/30/06

http://theamericanmuslim.org/tam.php/features/articles/mosques_in_us_that_have_experienced_violent_or_racist_incidents1/0012120

Mosques in the U.S. are becoming dangerous places. Type MOSQUE in The American Muslim site search engine and you will turn up 234 entries. I can't help but think that the violent rhetoric of conservative and religious commentators in America has to be counted as at least partially responsible for what is going on. When people say that Arabs are sub-human or that Muslim leaders should be killed and Muslims all converted to Christianity, it cannot help but have some effect over time. Ignorance and racism are a lot more powerful than people realize. throw in a bit of fear (talk about mosques needing surveillance, or being hotbeds of extremism), and even the most evolved of us may fall prey. Much of this violence is the result of religiously motivated reprisals against the Muslim community in general for acts committed by particular individuals or organizations.According to the most recent CAIR Report on hate crimes there was a 29% increase in anti-Muslim hate crimes in 2005. "Overall, nine states and the District of Columbia accounted for almost 79 percent of all civil rights complaints to CAIR in 2005. These ten states are (in descending order): California (19%), Illinois (13%), New York (9%), Texas (8%), Virginia (7%), Florida (6%), District of Columbia (5%), Maryland (4%), Ohio (4%) and New Jersey (4%)."We have been collecting information about mosque incidents for some time, and here is our (partial) list. If you know about other incidents, please contact us with the information. (MORE)

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