In this mailing:
- Judith Bergman: Facebook:
Championing Blasphemy Laws
- Saied Shoaaib: The Quran Says
Jerusalem Belongs to the Jews
- Amir Taheri: Iran: Anatomy of a
National Revolt
by Judith Bergman • January 15,
2018 at 5:00 am
- What is "harmful
content" according to the new Facebook guide for Muslims?
"Islamophobia, anti-Muslim hatred, far right extremism and
terrorist inspired violent extremist content".
- The guide does not
mention Islamic incitement to violence, which is rampant on
social media and -- unlike the other content mentioned -- has
deadly and tragic consequences in the real world. Most of those
who perpetrate terrorist attacks in the real world are Muslims
-- not "Islamophobes," anti-Muslims or right wing
extremists.
- Lakin v.
Facebook is a lawsuit,
representing 20,000 Israeli plaintiffs, which aims to stop
Facebook from "allowing Palestinian terrorists to incite
violent attacks against Israeli citizens and Jews on its
internet platform."
- Khan convened a
special meeting of Muslim ambassadors to discuss how effectively
to "raise the voice of the entire Muslim world against the
madness unleashed against Islam and holy personalities in the
name of freedom of expression". — Pakistani Interior
Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan.
Facebook, in
cooperation with a British Muslim group, recently launched a
"guide" developed especially for Muslims: "Keeping
Muslims Safe Online: Tackling Hate and Bigotry". Mark
Zuckerberg, Facebook's CEO, wrote about making Facebook a "safe
space" for Muslims. He has made no similar supportive statements
in favor of Jews or Christians. Pictured: Parts of the cover of the
new guide co-produced by Facebook.
Facebook, in cooperation with a British Muslim group,
Faith Associates, recently launched a new "guide" developed
especially for Muslims: "Keeping Muslims Safe Online: Tackling
Hate and Bigotry".
The launch of the guide was hosted on November 29 at
the British Parliament, where Karim Palant, Facebook's UK Public
Policy manager, acknowledged "the partnership of Facebook with
Faith Associates and said this was a first step in a line of
activities being planned to protect the Facebook family". Simon
Milner, Head of Policy UK at Facebook, stated:
"We're proud to be supporting Faith Associates in
the development of their online safety guide. Facebook welcomes all
communities, and there is no place for hate on the platform".
by Saied Shoaaib • January 15, 2018
at 4:30 am
- Quranic passages
clearly illustrate the Jews' imperative to enter the land of
Israel.
- And [mention, O
Muhammad], when Moses said to his people, "O my people,
remember the favor of Allah [God] upon you when He appointed
among you prophets and made you possessors and gave you that
which He had not given anyone among the worlds. O my people,
enter the Holy Land which Allah has assigned to you and do not
turn back and [thus] become losers." — Quran, Surah
Al-Ma'idah 5:20-21.
- According to verses in
the Quran, God punishes the Jews for their sin of refusing to
fight the indigenous people in the land, and God is angry that
the Jews refused to convert to Islam. Yet the verses are
consistent in their assertion that God gave the Jews the Holy
Land.
An aerial
view of the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, and much of Jerusalem's Old
City. (Image source: Andrew Shiva/Wikipedia)
Following U.S. President Donald Trump's December 6
official recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's capital, Muslims around
the world held angry demonstrations, during which they chanted
slogans about Jerusalem "belonging to Muslims." This ought
to seem odd to anyone versed in Islamic scripture, since the Quran
specifically states that God promised the land of Israel, including
Jerusalem, to the Jews.
Although ordinary Muslims who might not actually have
read their holy book could be excused for their ignorance about the
Jewish roots of and rights to Israel and Jerusalem, the same cannot
be said for the leaders of Muslim countries, imams and the heads of
illustrious Islamic institutions. Dignitaries and scholars of that
caliber should know better. Yet many of them repeat false assertions
that contradict the Quran and scholarly interpretations of its
verses.
by Amir Taheri • January 15, 2018
at 4:00 am
Anti-regime
protestors in Kermanshah, Iran, on December 29, 2017. (Image source:
VOA News/Wikimedia Commons)
With its flames declining after days of high blaze,
the "events" that shook Iran in December and early January
are still attracting a tsunami of comment, speculation and, as always
in such cases, misrepresentation.
The first question is what should we call what
happened.
The term "events" is too anodyne and the
term "revolution" too hyperbolic to do the job. The
Khomeinist leadership in Tehran started by using the term
"disturbances" ("eghteshashat") as if we
were dealing with a stampede in a bazaar or a crowd crash in a
Spanish bullfight arena. When it became clear that
"disturbances" in some 100 cities couldn't be dismissed in
so cavalier a manner, the Khomeinist authorities went for their
fallback position of blaming foreign conspirators for the whole
thing.
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