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LI Muslims Fume Over King's [R-NY] Remarks
Newsday ^
| February 12, 2004
| Elaine S. Povich
Posted on 02/13/2004 12:28:15 PM PST by aculeus
Washington -- Rep. Peter King said Wednesday he continues to believe that 85 percent of the mosques in the United States have "extremist leadership," and that while most Muslims are "loyal Americans," they are reluctant to come forward to cooperate with law enforcement when they hear anti-American rhetoric or plots.
King's comments, first made on the Sean Hannity radio show Tuesday, prompted outrage from the American Muslim community. Ghazi Khankan, director of the Westbury-based Islamic Center of Long Island, called King "out of touch with the Muslim community" and said he was particularly offended because King has visited the center many times.
(Excerpt) Read more at newsday.com ...
TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; US: New York; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: muslimamericans; peterking
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To: aculeus
Yeah, but I'll never forgive him for being one of the few Republicans in the House to vote against Clinton's articles of impeachment in 1998.
21
posted on
02/13/2004 1:19:14 PM PST
by
Alberta's Child
(Alberta -- the TRUE North strong and free.)
To: Paleo Conservative
It is time that someone stand up and try to tell the truth. Islam does not approve of the American way of life, and it has already set about to teke us over if they can. I regret the day that Islamics ever came to the USA, for they use our freedoms to push and shove their will on us. I see this as horror, because I had rather not even live than to live under Islam. Islam is more agressive than Communism that set about to take over the world, for Islam is political as religious in nature. May God help us!
22
posted on
02/13/2004 1:22:06 PM PST
by
tessalu
To: Alberta's Child
Yeah, but I'll never forgive him for being one of the few Republicans in the House to vote against Clinton's articles of impeachment in 1998.Me neither. And as an ex-NooYawker I detest his accent.
23
posted on
02/13/2004 1:30:22 PM PST
by
aculeus
To: petercooper
Peter King is a good man. Peter King was the most outspoken of the RINO five who voted against impeaching clinton. He appeared on numerous talk shows defending clinton. His wife then received a diplomatic post.
So, I think he's right this time, but I don't know how reliably good he is.
24
posted on
02/13/2004 1:37:55 PM PST
by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
To: aculeus
And he has voted against most tax cuts, for which I sent him a nasty note, and which he responded with an equally nasty note.
25
posted on
02/13/2004 1:47:40 PM PST
by
LS
(CNN is the Amtrack of news.)
To: kevao
I don't recall reading about Muslims "fuming" over, say, September 11. Me neither. But I remember my husband calling me on the cell phone while driving his truck through North Jersey, and asking if I knew why all the Muslims were dancing in the streets and setting off fireworks. He said he'd heard on the cb that the twin towers had been hit by planes and were falling to the ground. He knew that was just another wild story that gets passed over the cb, but wanted me to check the news and see what really happened. I remember a lot from that day, but I don't remember a single Muslim, then or since, express any sadness over it.
26
posted on
02/13/2004 1:59:09 PM PST
by
BykrBayb
(Temporary tagline. Applied to State of New Jersey for permanent tagline (12/24/03).)
To: Cicero
I take it back then. I didn't know he didn't vote to impeach.
27
posted on
02/13/2004 2:27:18 PM PST
by
petercooper
("daisy-cutters trump a wiretap anytime" - Nicole Gelinas, 02-10-04)
To: Cicero
Peter King was the most outspoken of the RINO five who voted against impeaching clinton. He appeared on numerous talk shows defending clinton. His wife then received a diplomatic post. So, I think he's right this time, but I don't know how reliably good he is. And he sold out pretty easily to Clinton, too, before impeachment -- all it took was for Bill to invite him over to the White House to watch the Super Bowl for King to give him such undying loyalty.
To: wtc911
Washington -- Rep. Peter King said Wednesday he continues to believe that 85 percent of the mosques in the United States have "extremist leadership," and that while most Muslims are "loyal Americans," they are reluctant to come forward to cooperate with law enforcement when they hear anti-American rhetoric or plots.
Islamic Extremism: A Viable Threat to U.S. National Security
An Open Forum at the U.S. Department of State, January 7, 1999
Transcript of presentation by Shaykh Muhammad Hisham Kabbani
(snip)
Moreover, what we are interested in in the United States. Id like to say that there have been many non-profit organizations established in the United States whose job is only to collect money and to send it, as you know most of you know to send it to extremists outside the United States. This is a big dilemma that is facing us here, because you don't know where the money is going, and it is more than hundreds of millions of dollars that have been sent to extremist parties in the Middle East and the Far East, as well as Afghanistan and the Caucasus now. Our sources say that many, many millions of dollars have been collected and sent. They send it under humanitarian aid, but it doesn't go to humanitarian aid. They say that it is to help the people of this country or that country, and they show on television and on their flyers that they are delivering it to help homeless people or poor people. Yes, some of it will go to homeless people and poor people but the majority, 90 per cent of it, will go into the black markets in these countries and buying weapon arsenals.
I know this from my home country of Lebanon where we used to receive a lot of aid from the United States and United Nations. As soon as the aid arrived in Lebanon, you could see a little bit go to the public and the rest would be sold in the black market. For a box that costs more than $100, you can go and buy it in the black market for less than $20. All this money, that came under humanitarian aid, they resell so you cannot trace it, they go back and buy weapons with it to fight and to spread extremism under the name of Islam.
The second issue that United States has to look on within, for security, is the fact that there are many Muslim organizations that claim to speak on behalf of the Muslim community but that in reality are not moderate, but extremist. They hijacked the mike, or they were elected because they are good speakers, but they give a wrong idea about Islam. Always we see them in the media criticizing and complaining and sending action alerts and media alerts and showing people that we do not accept this or we reject that.
Like, for example, with the recent issue of Iraq. The Islamic Supreme Council sent a statement that there are victims in Iraq and there is bloodshed in Iraq, but it is a matter of national security to stop Saddam Hussein from running the country, and it is not a Muslim issue. When everyone was saying from the Muslim community that it is a Muslim issue, we stood fast and we stood alone to say that it is not a Muslim issue but that it is a political issue. Saddam Hussein is a communist in his background. He is of the socialist Ba'ath party, which does not believe in religion. It is secular and does not believe in religion. Anyone who has a beard or anyone wears a turban will be put in prison within a day. This is the mentality of this kind of regime. So it is not a Muslim issue, it's a political issue. It's a Muslim issue when you are hurting the people, and you are hurting a whole community as if we were to say that we are fighting the Iraqi people. But the policy was not to fight the Iraqi people. The policy was to fight a tyranny that was running Iraq. That's a big difference. So we stood up and we said this and we have received a lot of criticism from the Muslim community. But we want to advise the American community and we want to advise our government, our congressmen, that there is something big going on and people are not understanding it.
The third major problem that is now going on is that you have many mosques around the United States and there is not an organized government or policy to look over the mosques like in Muslim countries where you cannot open a mosque by yourself, and you cannot open a charity by yourself. It has to be done according to the structure of the Islamic religion. That's why in the Muslim countries, you cannot find extremist ideology. As soon as you find the extremist ideology they kick them out and bring in traditional Islamic scholars. The extremist ideology comes from the street so the extremists don't know what they are talking about. So they form small circles in different homes or different basements or in different areas and they begin to brainwash the people. That's why we find this kind of movement is becoming big now, especially when the idea is that we have a struggle between us and the United States. "United States is not supporting us," "United States is supporting someone else," they find that United States is not supporting Afghanistan, as Congressman Rohrabacher said. The United States supported Pakistan, the United States supported Egypt, the United States supported PLO and the peace treaty, the United States supported Saudi Arabia, the United States supported Kuwait. The United States is supporting whomever they can, but sometimes it is out of reach that they can support everyone. So they cannot be blamed. The United States cannot be blamed for something that they cannot control.
The most dangerous thing that is going on now in these mosques, that has been sent upon these mosques around the United States like churches they were established by different organizations and that is ok but the problem with our communities is the extremist ideology. Because they are very active they took over the mosques; and we can say that they took over more than 80% of the mosques that have been established in the US. And there are more than 3000 mosques in the US.
So it means that the methodology or ideology of extremist has been spread to 80% of the Muslim population, but not all of them agree with it. But mostly the youth and the new generation do because they are students and they don't think except with their emotions and they are rebellious against their own leaders and government. This is the nature and psychology of human beings. When we are students in university or college we always fight the government, whether they are right or wrong, we have to attack the government. This is how they have been raised.
In this way we see that the extremist ideology, and this is the fourth danger, is beginning to spread very quickly into the universities through the national organizations, associations and clubs that they are establishing around the universities. Most of these clubs they are Muslim clubs and the biggest is the national one are being run mostly by the extremist ideology that they do not understand other than to say that America is wrong and they are right. You can find this on the Internet; you can find it everywhere on homepages and websites that they are against the United States. This is where we don't know how far it goes, and how far it is out of hand. This might affect the whole university system in the United States. Through the universities there will be the most danger. If the nuclear atomic warheads reach these universities, you dont know what these students are going to do, because their way of thinking is brainwashed, limited and narrow-minded.
http://www.islamicsupremecouncil.org/bin/site/wrappers/default.asp?pane_2=content-extremism_inamerica_unveiling010799 Note the date. Rep. King is correct.
29
posted on
02/13/2004 8:16:25 PM PST
by
Valin
(Politicians are like diapers. They both need changing regularly and for the same reason.)
Comment #30 Removed by Moderator
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