Posted on 04/30/2003 11:54:58 PM PDT by JohnHuang2
A former newspaper reporter says she stands by her story claiming the chairman of a leading Muslim lobby group declared the Quran should be America's highest authority.
In a press release accusing WorldNetDaily of "demonizing Muslims," the Washington, D.C.-based Council on American-Islamic Relations, or CAIR, denied its chairman of the board, Omar Ahmad, made the statement and said it is seeking a retraction from the newspaper that published the story July 4, 1998.
However, Steve Waterhouse, editor of The Argus in Fremont, Calif., since 1997, told WND his paper has not been contacted by CAIR. The article also was run in a sister publication, the San Ramon Valley Herald. The paper's city editor, Dave Boitano, said he would have known if CAIR had sought a retraction.
The reporter who covered the event, Lisa Gardiner, told WND she remembers the strong statement by Ahmad, who was one of several speakers at a session titled, "How Should We As Muslims Live in America?" at an Islamic conference in Fremont.
Gardiner, regarded as a reliable reporter, is now a legislative aide for California Democratic Assemblyman John Dutra. She said the statement in question is her paraphrase but insisted it is accurate and will not retract the story.
Her article also paraphrases Ahmad saying, "Islam isn't in America to be equal to any other faith but to become dominant."
WND Editor Joseph Farah referred to Omar's remarks which have been cited by other critics of CAIR in a column last week on the Muslim group's campaign to derail President Bush's nomination of Middle East scholar Daniel Pipes to the U.S. Institute of Peace.
In its press release, CAIR said Farah's most recent articles "smeared" the Muslim group with numerous "falsehoods and distortions" in an attempt to support Pipes' "controversial" nomination. The group claims WND stories "prompted" readers to write "hate-filled" messages to CAIR, and that some are being examined by the Justice Department.
Presidential spokesman Ari Fleischer responded yesterday to a question by WND's White House correspondent about CAIR's opposition to Pipes.
"The nomination continues to stand," Fleischer said.
Living in America
Omar's remarks have been cited by CAIR critics in the context of charges the group is tied to a radical element of Islam rather than the mainstream it claims to represent.
Its press release says: "CAIR, America's largest Islamic civil liberties group, is a mainstream organization that regularly works with national law enforcement authorities, elected officials and other civil liberties and minority groups.
A copy of Gardiner's original article, provided by Waterhouse, said in part:
Omar M. Ahmad, chairman of the board of the Council on American-Islamic relations, spoke before a packed crowd at the Flamingo Palace banquet hall on Peralta Boulevard, urging Muslims not to shirk their duty of sharing the Islamic faith with those who are "on the wrong side."
Muslim institutions, schools and economic power should be strengthened in America, he said. Those who stay in America should be "open to society without melting (into it)," keeping mosques open so anyone can come and learn about Islam, he said.
"If you choose to live here (in America) ... you have a responsibility to deliver the message of Islam," he said.
Islam isn't in America to be equal to any other faith, but to become dominant, he said. The Koran, the Muslim book of scripture, should be the highest authority in America, and Islam the only accepted religion on Earth, he said.
When asked whether CAIR had contacted the newspaper for a retraction as indicated by its press release, national spokesman Ibrahim Hooper told WND, "[Ahmad] never made the statement, and we have sought a retraction."
Pressed several times to specify whether CAIR already has contacted the newspaper, he repeated the statement then finally said someone from CAIR's California affiliate made the contact.
When confronted with the fact the editors say CAIR has not contacted them and the reporter stands by the story, he ended the call with, "If you are going to use distortions, I can't stop you; it's a free country. Have a nice day."
Hooper called back, however, and said he wanted to change his statement to say, "We will seek a retraction, and we have spoken to the reporter about it in the past."
Justice probe?
Although WND did not solicit or encourage the virulent e-mails, CAIR's press release ties them to the newssite, and Hooper told WND the Justice Department is "looking into it."
"CAIR's leadership has an Islamic totalitarian mindset just like their funders in Saudi Arabia and their friends in the Hamas terrorist group," said Farah. "They dish it out pretty well, but they can't take any criticism not even e-mails! You should see the hate mail I get from CAIR's members. It would make your hair stand on end."
Farah said "these extremists like to try to intimidate people, but they can't stand up like men and take it. Now they are running to the Justice Department for help. Fortunately for us, we don't have Shariah law in this country; we live free under the U.S. Constitution."
A Justice spokesman, Drew Wade, said the department does not confirm or deny ongoing investigations.
Paul Bresson of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, who looked at CAIR's examples of the e-mails when WND forwarded him the press release, said the FBI thoroughly examines the merits of each case, and he could not immediately judge whether they rose to the level of a threat worthy of investigation. He said, however, if they essentially amounted to just epithets, a probe would be unlikely.
"We would have a lot of work to do" to make a case out of it, he said.
Motivated to promote unity
Gardiner explained the newspaper's coverage of Ahmad's 1998 speech well before Sept. 11, 2001 was partly motivated by the "need to know more about the diversity of religions in California and the world."
"That was something we worked for, and the newspaper was covering many Muslims in the community," she said.
She considered her personal interaction with the Muslim leaders "extremely positive" and enriching.
"I think it would be unfortunate if this [controversy] ultimately ended up creating more hostility and misunderstanding," she said.
No second-place winner, no "third way" solution-- it's March or Die time, folks.
It's Us versus an eighth-century "culture" of plunder, forced religious "conversions," and the mistreatment of women.
The sooner we face this fact realistically and quit dancing around PC talking-point nonsense about diversity and tolerance, the better off we'll all be.
We didn't pick this fight- which really has roots in Jimmy Carter's appeasement in 1979 of militants- but we had damn well better see it for what it is, and be prepared to face it and finish it.
I'll put it in raw, personal terms-- I don't want Sharia law visited upon my women, and I don't want a goatroper "culture" infesting my land.
I don't want their vile, nasty weapons of mass destruction loosed on my fair country, either.
They picked the fight, so it's up to us to finish it- balls to the wall, hammer and anvil, fire and blood and iron... freedom is never, ever free, and the coin of the realm is men's lives.
What we saw during Gulf War I was our military doctrine ( high tech ) versus Soviet doctrine ( throw a lot of low tech iron at the problem )-- and we all know how that turned out.
What we have just seen in the 3-Week War is Information-Tech,
( Some are calling it Hyperwarfare... )
or 21st Century warfare versus 20th Century...
What I would suggest, and call your attention to, is the fact that we, and Israel, are capable of waging 21st Century warfare, and the entire Arab world is not.
Proven fact, by recent events.
One more thing- this will be a war where we are all called to be warriors- so I suggest to you that the time has come to get hard, and stay hard... it really is time for blood and Iron...
Why should a lying Muslim surprise you?
And it is isnt over yet. Not by a long shot.
One can only wonder why the Liberal PC Tolerance Police in this country have not gotten the message Islam is as much a threat to them as to normal people, and are prompted to take action?
All we hear from them is either silence or insistence on tolerance for these crazies.
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