Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Little Tich

(6,171 posts)
Thu Dec 15, 2016, 02:55 AM Dec 2016

This message was self-deleted by its author

This message was self-deleted by its author (Little Tich) on Mon Mar 20, 2017, 10:19 AM. When the original post in a discussion thread is self-deleted, the entire discussion thread is automatically locked so new replies cannot be posted.

9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
 

shira

(30,109 posts)
1. Principles And Politics: The Southern Poverty Law Center Loses The Plot
Thu Dec 15, 2016, 05:47 AM
Dec 2016
In addition to threats of violence by Islamic fundamentalists, liberal critics of Islam are increasingly abandoned. At best, we are inconvenient afterthoughts, at worst, bigots and hate-mongers.

The intellectual confusion and moral paralysis plaguing the Western Left around the religion of Islam has done much to add credibility to the Western Right. Embodying the now-common approach of elevating politics over principle, the Southern Poverty Law Center has accused the ex-Muslim atheist Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Muslim reformer Maajid Nawaz of “anti-Muslim extremism”.

In the recently issued report Field Guide to Anti-Muslim Extremists, the SPLC claims to have identified 15 “anti-Muslim extremists” who it believes are represented too often in mainstream media.

These “extremists”, the SPLC contends, spread “baseless and damaging lies” in order to demonize all Muslims. The Field Guide aims to arm journalists with information so that they may challenge the “hateful rhetoric and misinformation” of the extremists, or better yet, “deny them a public platform altogether.”

Perhaps in more competent hands, a report such as this may have been a useful guide for journalists with little time to spend on background research. However, the one produced by SPLC is neither reliable nor factual, and often steers closer to the category of yellow journalism than anything worth serious consideration.

Perhaps in more competent hands, a report such as this may have been a useful guide for journalists with little time to spend on background research. However, the one produced by SPLC is neither reliable nor factual, and often steers closer to the category of yellow journalism than anything worth serious consideration.
Nuance is lost where the religion of peace is concerned, and the SPLC paints its targets with a broad, clumsy brush. Those profiled range from pundits who believe that radicals have “infiltrated the CIA, FBI, Pentagon, and State Department” to activists who offer compassionate, empathetic, and exceedingly balanced views on the faith. The latter is exemplified by the Muslim reformer Maajid Nawaz, who spent his formative years in the service of an Islamist organization working to re-establish a global caliphate. After disavowing his former associates, he has spent the past decade working to encourage reform and secularization in Muslim countries and communities.

Nearly every charge against him in the report is patently absurd. His act of solidarity with students who wore a benign cartoon of Prophet Muhammad on a t-shirt is a cited as a qualification for his “anti-Muslim extremism”. Nawaz tweeted a picture of the cartoon, declaring that such trifles don’t offend him.

For this conciliatory and progressive gesture, he earned the ire of the Muslim community, condemnation by “liberals”, and death threats by fanatics. It appears that the SPLC now polices acts considered blasphemous as “anti-Muslim extremism”, citing the Islamic religious belief in their indictment.

If mere tweeting of cartoons is tantamount to bigotry, one wonders how they would judge the actions of the actual cartoonists. Perhaps the SPLC list should include the creators of the show South Park for their depictions of Jesus and Mohammed. In the same vein, Andres Serrano’s ‘Piss Christ’ surely also qualifies him as an anti-Christian “extremist”, along with the National Endowment for the Arts that presented him with an award. But I won’t be holding my breath for the latter. In the eyes of some my fellow liberals, blasphemy is bigotry only when Islam is the target.

Nawaz’s entry reads like a gossip blog written by his most paranoid enemies, repeating debunked claims and rumors as factual evidence. In reference to his account of his journey to de-radicalization, SPLC ominously contends that “major elements of his story have been disputed by former friends, members of his family, fellow jihadists and journalists”, neglecting to substantiate this damning assessment in any form whatsoever.

Let’s break that down, shall we?


http://www.theexmuslim.com/2016/10/27/southern_poverty_law_center_loses_the_plot/

Response to shira (Reply #1)

 

shira

(30,109 posts)
4. The SPLC is politically compromised like other politically biased groups.
Thu Dec 15, 2016, 09:23 PM
Dec 2016
I've had no reason to ever doubt SPLC in the past.


Well now you do with the Maajid Nawaz fiasco.

Then again, your take on human rights is whatever the antizionist BDS movement advocates, and let's face it - every western liberal nation's leaders believe the BDS movement is antisemitic, including our own (Obama, Bernie, Hillary, etc.).

You need to cut bait with the BDS movement in order to be taken seriously on anything human rights related. Your defense of the UN for example (condemning Israel more than the rest of the world combined, their many scandals like mass child rape, thousands dead in Haiti) demonstrates the depravity of your position on universal human rights (as well as the NGO's who never condemn it). The UN's passed more resolutions vs. Israel than Syria for the past 5 years. See what's happening in Allepo, hello? These politically compromised NGO's don't give a crap. Is that really your idea of human rights?

Response to shira (Reply #4)

 

shira

(30,109 posts)
7. That's it? Critics of the foundation (radical Islamists) say Quilliam smears....
Fri Dec 16, 2016, 07:26 AM
Dec 2016

....and that's proof enough for you?

Response to shira (Reply #7)

 

shira

(30,109 posts)
9. Weak sauce. Nawaz is anything but an anti-Muslim bigot. SPLC blew it....
Sat Dec 17, 2016, 12:18 AM
Dec 2016
Unlike the likes of Gaffney and Geller, he doesn’t espouse the view that Islam itself is a problem; unlike (Hirsi) Ali, who now describes herself as an atheist, Nawaz identifies as a Muslim....

...“I’m the one who’s a Muslim in this!” he said. “I’m listed there with people such as Pam Geller? It’s unbelievable.” He pointed out that he does things like appear in an Intelligence Squared debate arguing for the proposition—against Ali, in fact—that Islam is a religion of peace. (“I lost the vote,” he said, with a tinge of bitterness.) He has also won praise for battling Islamophobes in the press....

....One thing that seemed to particularly irk Nawaz was the fact that the report came from SPLC. While the group is controversial—and particularly loathed on the American right—Nawaz’s objection was that he has known and respected their work for years. “It lends the wingnuts a level of credibility,” he said....

...But what makes Nawaz’s appearance on the list so peculiar is that he and SPLC share the goal of fighting back against unfair targeting of Muslims. If even natural-seeming allies are preoccupied fighting each other about tactics, what hope is there prevailing in the fight against real bigots?


As to SPLC's charge...

Nawaz disputes the claim. Quilliam says the list in question was an appendix to a larger report, and simply a list of British Muslim organizations; in fact, he says, the point was to say that such groups should be legal, even if they were extremist, so long as they were not violent. “It wasn’t a terror list,” Nawaz said. “We were saying, don’t ban these groups. We’ve gone through the looking glass. It’s the direct opposite of my life’s work.” He pointed to an exchange on the floor of Parliament, in which then-Prime Minister Gordon Brown cited him in defense of the notion that Islamist parties such as Hizb ut-Tahrir, with which Nawaz was affiliated in his radical days, ought not to be illegal:

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2016/10/maajid-nawaz-splc-anti-muslim-extremist/505685/

You clearly don't know what bigotry and racism are when you accuse liberal Muslim reformers like Nawaz based on the flimsiest of weak evidence, yet spew regressive bigotry from Mondoweiss - a website that advocates & supports Hamas "resistance" (terror attacks on Jews), and promotes outright vile racists like Alison Weir, Paul Larudee, & Gilad Atzmon as well as Jews = Khazars bigotry.

You really have no foot to stand on WRT charges of racism.

Once you finally free yourself from the BDS movement, Mondoweiss, etc... you can be taken more seriously. You got close once by trying to distance yourself from that nastiness but they symbolize all you believe on I/P. You can't cut yourself free.

ck4829

(35,821 posts)
2. Frank Gaffney, the guy who saw a crescent in a US gov logo?
Thu Dec 15, 2016, 06:42 AM
Dec 2016

Frank Gaffney, a protégé of Richard Perle and an influential figure in right wing national security circles, has firmly entered the world of right wing tin-foil hat paranoia.

Media Matters documents the development of a new right wing conspiracy theory, claiming that the Obama administration manipulated the redesign of the Missile Defense Agency to look like his campaign logo. This theory then evolved to claims that the new logo incorporates the Islamic crescent as well.

This nutty conspiracy theory was escalated by Frank Gaffney, who sees it as explaining Obama’s rationale behind his cuts to missile defense. How so? Well because he is a secret Muslim of course, which since all Muslims are out to destroy America, means Obama is out to do the same

By spreading this crazy paranoid conspiracy, Gaffney not only is defaming the President, he is also defaming the people who work and lead the Missile Defense Agency. The idea that the President would pay attention to an agency logo redesign or that the design in anyway reflected some secret Muslim agenda, as Richard Lehner of the Missile Defense Agency noted, “is ridiculous.” Lehner told Fox that “it isn’t a new logo to replace the official logo. It’s a logo developed for recruiting materials and for our public Web site. Also, it was used prior to the 2008 election and it has no link to any political campaign.”

https://thinkprogress.org/frank-gaffney-posits-that-missile-defense-logo-is-evidence-of-obamas-submission-to-shariah-17386118306#.vwrn9dlhv

 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
5. Trump will be the most popular US pol in Israel in decades
Thu Dec 15, 2016, 10:14 PM
Dec 2016

Alt-right and the Israeli right a lot more similar than different.

Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Israel/Palestine»This message was self-del...