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Are bloggers against hate, or feeding it?
SPTimes ^ | 01/16/06 | S.I. ROSENBAUM

Posted on 01/18/2006 4:34:50 PM PST by Pikamax

Are bloggers against hate, or feeding it? Blogs dedicated to protecting America against terrorism are troubling the Muslim community. By S.I. ROSENBAUM Published January 16, 2006

It's 4 a.m. Somewhere near Coral Springs, Joe Kaufman is still at his computer.

Blurry with fatigue, he types:

It has been said that 80 percent of all the mosques ... inside the United States are ... tied to a radical form of Islam. ...

One of the American locations that ... influence has been prevalent is the Tampa-St. Pete area of Southwest Florida.

Kaufman is 35, clean-shaven, a lawyer's assistant. He goes inline skating and writes love songs on guitar. But his passion is his Web site, AmericansAgainstHate.com, where he monitors the activities of Florida's Muslim community, looking for terrorist links.

Kaufman's site is only one of a constellation of blogs with names like JihadWatch.com, MilitantIslamMonitor.org, and WesternResistance.com that are dedicated to the surveillance of American Muslims. The blogs link to one another, with more-traveled sites amplifying stories from more obscure ones, like Kaufman's.

He claims he has not found a single mosque in Florida that is not linked to terrorists.

A lot of people are listening.

Last month, after Kaufman called a Tampa Muslim religious retreat a "jihad camp for children" and wrote that the speakers were "linked to al-Qaida," death threats poured in to the Presbyterian camp hosting the event.

Muslims say the blogs breed hate.

"He's spreading lies, slandering individuals," said Ahmed Bedier, spokesman for the Tampa Bay chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. "These are vigilantes."

Kaufman and other bloggers say their work is vital to the country's safety.

"I don't hate Muslims," Kaufman said. "But I'm going to fight to have the public understand that there are enemies of America ... that are living in America as we speak."

* * *

As a boy, Kaufman says he was tormented for being Jewish, which shaped his view of himself.

"These kids turned me into an animal," Kaufman said.

In college, things were better with more friends, especially his roommate, he said. Then he came back to his dorm room one day to see a swastika flag on the wall.

"It was like time stopped for me. And I thought to myself, either I'm going to go through this for the rest of my life, or I'm going to fight it."

Kaufman said he got his roommate kicked out of school for smoking marijuana.

"It made me feel ... that I finally punished the people who were punishing me all of my life."

On Sept. 11, 2001, watching the World Trade Center's twin towers fall, he said it felt again as if time had stopped.

"I decided, like I'd decided in college, to fight against hatred."

* * *

To Kaufman and other bloggers, the events of Sept. 11 were born of Islam's teachings.

"We want to wake up the people of the Western world to the dangers of Islam," said Miami's Sorge Diaz of WesternResistance.com.

The bloggers cite verses in the Koran that encourage believers to kill enemies of the faith. But Muslims say these passages are taken out of context and refer only to historical times.

"It's not an open-ended edict to go out and kill people," said Bedier, the CAIR spokesman. "There are hundreds of thousands of verses that talk about peace."

Bedier of Tampa is familiar with the blogs. His name often appears as a supporter of terrorism on Kaufman's site.

"It's a clearinghouse for defamation and attacks against Muslims," Bedier said.

"I like to go out and reach out to folks and build bridges," he added. "These types of people, they want to be able to wedge a gap between Muslims and the rest of society."

To fight back, Bedier is starting his own blog, AhmedBedier.blogspot.com. He said he wants to set the Internet record straight.

"Nowadays when you meet people, they go home and Google your name," he said. On the search engine, the top hits for Bedier's name are articles by Kaufman.

"I'm not going to let bigots like that define who I am," Bedier said.

* * *

The bloggers say they're safeguarding the country.

Kaufman said he has worked with law enforcement to uncover terrorists, leading to deportations and arrests.

Daniel Sutherland of the Department of Homeland Security said the government is more interested in forging bonds with Muslims.

"There is no clash of civilizations going on here, there is no "us' and "them,"' he said.

William Carter of the FBI said the bureau wants citizens to pass on helpful information. But, he added, "It's not like we have people who are scanning the Internet, looking at bloggers."

Daniel McBride, a spokesman for the Islamic Center of Boca Raton, sees a different picture. His mosque has tangled with Kaufman, especially last May when a member was arrested on terrorism-related charges. (McBride himself is facing criminal insurance fraud charges, but that case is unrelated to his religion.)

Now, McBride said, he and others sometimes hear from FBI agents who are following up on something from a blog - often Kaufman's.

"They check out all that stuff," he said. "They'll tell you, "Joe said this' or "Joe said that.' They say, "We have to follow up on it, because if we don't and something did happen ..."'

* * *

Jennifer Valko opened her e-mail and saw a message of hate.

I will undress you paint your body with pig fat & light you. America is on to you! Watch your back!

It was the Thursday after Christmas. In two days, the Muslim spiritual retreat she had helped plan was scheduled to take place at Cedarkirk, a Presbyterian camp and conference center in eastern Hillsborough County.

That morning, Kaufman had appeared on Fox News to talk about the retreat.

On his Web site, he had posted articles about it. He posted computer-altered images of masked terrorists standing in front of the Lithia campsite.

He said these images were meant to be "tongue in cheek." But some readers took them seriously. Hate mail and death threats poured in to the Tampa Muslim American Society.

The conference center's director also got death threats and closed the center for the weekend, forcing the retreat elsewhere.

Kaufman called the threats "disgusting," saying he gets death threats because of his blog.

"I know what I went through growing up, and it was never my intention to cause any type of hatred against anyone."

But he added, "I can't let it stop me from what I'm doing. ... I'm assisting in the safety and security of the American people."

Other bloggers agree.

Robert Spencer of JihadWatch.com said his blog sometimes attracts racists. He bans them, he said.

But he won't stop blogging.

"If I give it up and go away and take up the saxophone, then what the heck is going to happen to society and to the rest of the world?" he asked.

* * *

Last month, while Kaufman was researching his story about the Tampa retreat, he found himself reading about a man named Mazen Mokhtar, a scheduled speaker. Then Kaufman began to recall a Mazen he once knew.

One of his closest friends in high school was a Palestinian named Mazen, he said. They had never discussed politics.

"He seemed like a very good person," Kaufman said. "I believe he was a true friend."

They lost contact, he said. Kaufman thought of looking him up. Then he thought better of it.

"I don't really know what he would think about what I do," he said.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: newmedia; weblogs

1 posted on 01/18/2006 4:34:52 PM PST by Pikamax
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To: Pikamax

Bloggers featured are blasting the piece saying they misquoted which given its the Poynter-owned SP Times, this is not a surprise and none of them should be shocked. What did they expect? A objective piece?


2 posted on 01/18/2006 4:38:37 PM PST by Pikamax
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To: Pikamax
Muslims say the blogs breed hate

Or, they are the only places to gather a snippet of the truth.

Three former terrorists tell it like it is:

http://www.shoebat.com/cn8.php

3 posted on 01/18/2006 4:38:50 PM PST by Nachum
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To: Pikamax

If the shoe fits...


4 posted on 01/18/2006 4:39:02 PM PST by gedeon3
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To: Pikamax
Are bloggers against hate or feeding it?--the question itself is misleading I should think.

Can Muslim bloggers blog their opinions?
5 posted on 01/18/2006 4:41:03 PM PST by Asclepius (protectionists would outsource our dignity and prosperity in return for illusory job security)
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To: Pikamax

"Blogs dedicated to protecting America against terrorism are troubling the Muslim community"

The words seem to be in the wrong order, bloggers are probably more worried by the Muslims.


6 posted on 01/18/2006 4:44:22 PM PST by ansel12
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To: Pikamax
Are bloggers against hate, or feeding it?---Blogger Jihad Watch responds
7 posted on 01/18/2006 4:45:35 PM PST by perfect stranger
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To: Pikamax


Well there you have it, until people like Hilary Clinton start telling us what we can (and cannot) say we're in trouble.


8 posted on 01/18/2006 5:08:16 PM PST by Tzimisce
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To: Pikamax

Yep, free speech is hate. Therefore, we can regulate it, or better yet, ban it completely. In the old USSR, they used to call it "anti-Soviet propoganda." We're a lot more modern, though, and we've learned from the failure of the Left in the Soviet Union. First, you need to give the offending behavior a disturbing label, such as "hate" or "extreme." Next, attack the behavior with examples that inflame the emotions instead of promoting careful thought. Marginalize those expressing the behavior with wild accusations in the media (where this article fits in the mix). Set up straw horses and posit phony questions. Attack opponents by calling them "bigots," "reactionaries," or "conservatives." Eventually, many people will be fooled into believing that there really is a problem with "hate bloggers" and the government can step in and ban the whole thing. Lenin would love the process; if he were alive, he'd probably laud the idea in a pamphlet.


9 posted on 01/18/2006 5:12:14 PM PST by redpoll (redpoll)
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To: Pikamax

Stupid article and stupid title. There are as many bloggers on any side of an issue or opinion as there are on any other side. Yet, in a vain attempt to discredit their latest competition, they lump all bloggers in one big pile (and one they imply doesn't smell too good). It's like asking "Are all reporters against the United States?" Clearly most working for large mainstream newspapers are, but it's not universal.


10 posted on 01/18/2006 5:17:32 PM PST by No Longer Free State (No event has just one cause, no person has just one motive, no action has just the intended effect)
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Comment #11 Removed by Moderator

To: Pikamax
And just a half hour later, another post says Americans Must Understand U.S. Is at War, General Says. This view by DoD is 180 degrees out from the inanity by Daniel Sutherland of the Department of Homeland Security -- "the government is more interested in forging bonds with Muslims. 'There is no clash of civilizations going on here, there is no us and them, he said."

Sutherland is clearly ignorant boob from Foggy Bottom. Our own government needs to develop one coherent position on this critical issue.

12 posted on 01/18/2006 6:05:47 PM PST by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: Pikamax

Is vigilance going to be outlawed next?

Blog'em till they cry uncle bump


13 posted on 01/18/2006 6:13:56 PM PST by Liberty Valance ("Chloe ... I need another way out of here..." ~ Jack Bauer)
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To: Pikamax
It may be time for Muslim leaders and bloggers to get on the right side of the issue and become more vocally pro American. No one is stopping them.
14 posted on 01/18/2006 6:54:52 PM PST by Mike Darancette (Mesocons for Rice '08)
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To: Pikamax
Blogs dedicated to protecting America against terrorism are troubling the Muslim community.

What troubles the muslim community is of absolutely no interest to me.
Muslim behavior worldwide speaks for itself and will never deserve any respect in my lifetime.

Rent seeking will be of absolutely no benefit to them. No one can ever legislate respect.

Abandon your mass-murdering ways (all cultures are NOT equal), act civilized and contribute to the good of humanity for a few generations, quit whining and then we can talk.

I figure around 2075, at the earliest.

15 posted on 01/18/2006 6:59:24 PM PST by Publius6961 (The IQ of California voters is about 420........... .............cumulatively)
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