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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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October 3, 2018
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CAIR
Proves Irony is Not Dead
IPT News
October 3, 2018
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One of our staffers
made a mistake on social media Monday involving the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). When CAIR pointed it out, he
acknowledged the error and deleted the inaccurate post.
But that wasn't good enough. CAIR likened his position working for IPT
Executive Director Steven Emerson to being "'Chief Googler' for David
Duke."
The episode is telling, and not in any manner CAIR thinks it is. For
starters, it shows how CAIR is quick to point out other people's mistakes
but never acknowledges its own failings. And it shows that CAIR officials
lack any sense of irony or self-awareness.
CAIR likened Emerson
to the former Ku Klux Klan leader and renowned hater 24 hours after its
Missouri chapter co-sponsored a conference with a group called American
Muslims for Palestine (AMP), a group which supports Hamas and doesn't simply oppose Israeli
policies, but tries to undermine Israel's entire legitimacy.
The gathering featured a speech by Linda Sarsour. Just a week earlier,
the Investigative Project on Terrorism exposed Sarsour's anti-Semitic tirade in which she
blamed Jews for police shootings of unarmed black people in the United
States. The Anti-Defamation League (ADL), she said, "takes police
officers from America, funds their trips, takes them to Israel so they can
be trained by the Israeli police and military, and then they come back here
and do what? Stop and frisk, killing unarmed black people across the
country."
Here's the clip:
Sarsour rejects sovereignty for the Jewish people, rejects political support from Zionists and pushes a
conspiracy theory that can only foster hatred toward Jews. That sounds an
awful lot like David Duke. Yet, she still is welcomed and honored at CAIR
events, including fundraisers.
She's not the only one. CAIR hosts its national fundraising banquet Oct. 20 outside
Washington, D.C. Speakers include Yasir Qadhi, a religious leader who advocates for Saudi Arabian-styled restrictions on
Muslim women's lives and has spoken
against capitalism and democracy, and Hatem Bazian, a leader of the BDS campaign that aims to
isolate Israel economically and politically.
CAIR Executive
Director Nihad Awad, meanwhile, embraces Turkey's authoritarian Islamist President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has jailed thousands of journalists and dissidents and allowed Turkey to be a base for exiled Hamas leaders.
Other Muslims have taken CAIR to task for blindly supporting Erdogan.
But Erdogan's support for Hamas is relevant to CAIR's reaction to our
staffer's Twitter error.
It started when Zuhdi Jasser, founder and president of the American
Islamic Forum for Democracy (AIFD) reposted an irreverent comic strip
called "Jesus and
Mo" as part of "Blasphemy Day." The comic casts Jesus and
Mohamed in an "Odd Couple" sort of roommate arrangement in a
series that mocks religion.
CAIR's national Twitter account used Jasser's post to smear him – a Muslim who advocates for reform of his
faith – as an "Islamophobia enabler" and later claimed that reposting a Jesus and Mo comic shows that
Jasser and AIFD don't "have the same respect for our beloved
Prophets."
Maajid Nawaz, a former radical and a fellow advocate for reform within
Islam, suggested Wednesday morning that CAIR's rhetoric could
lead radical Muslims to target Nawaz.
"There's nothing wrong with criticising Islam," Nawaz wrote,
"especially (but not exclusively) if done by Muslims, like him. He's
defending satire here, not criticising it himself. That word Islamophobia
is a total misnomer, for this very reason."
CAIR, meanwhile,
grew reticent when the AIFD challenged it to condemn Hamas or acknowledge that
Hamas is a terrorist organization.
It's a question that CAIR officials have ducked
as far back as 2001. Sometimes they try to talk around the question. Other times, they try to use
indignation to steamroll the questioner.
Bullying is easy. Acknowledging skeletons in its own closet is a bit
more difficult. And CAIR has plenty of skeletons.
It has never directly addressed its roots in a Muslim Brotherhood
network in the United States called the "Palestine Committee."
Evidence seized by the FBI show that the committee was charged with helping
Hamas politically and financially. And a meeting agenda dated within weeks of CAIR's 1994
formation places it under the committee's umbrella.
Awad, the only executive director CAIR has ever had, was listed in a
Palestine Committee telephone list.
The evidence was so substantial it prompted the FBI to prohibit agents from working with CAIR outside of
formal investigations in 2008, "until we can resolve whether there
continues to be a connection between CAIR or its executives and
HAMAS."
That policy remains in effect a decade later, so the questions either
have not been resolved or have answers CAIR doesn't want you to consider.
CAIR has faced few other consequences for its history, for the radical and often bigoted messages spewed by its officials throughout the
country. Reporters rarely ask about them and give CAIR kid-glove treatment.
Despite that, CAIR's first reaction is to go for the smear. Oppose
Islamism and repost a provocative cartoon? You're an Islamophobe! Make an
incorrect assertion, which is acknowledged and corrected? Invoke David
Duke.
And in those rare cases in which you are asked about your record? Deflect and attack.
It does tell people a lot about CAIR.
Related Topics: The
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), social
media, David
Duke, ADL,
Linda
Sarsour, anti-Semitism,
blasphemy,
Jesus
and Mo, Zuhdi
Jasser, American
Islamic Forum for Democracy, Maajid
Nawaz, Yasir
Qadhi, Hatem
Bazian, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, Nihad
Awad, Palestine
Committee, Hamas
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