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Frank Salvato,
Managing Editor
Pretending to Speak for an Entire Culture
October 30, 2009
One of the things that brings me to
the boiling point is when I hear elected officials tell me what
“Americans want” or what “Americans think.” To believe that today’s
federally elected politicians understand – or care – what their
constituents want, never mind Americans on the whole, after they
belittled town hall attendees and ignored the citizenry’s opposition to
government-run healthcare is to exist in fantasyland. No, federally
elected politicians (and in many cases local politicians, as well) only
invoke the wants and thoughts of “Americans” when they want to bolster
their political positions and those have more to do with special
interest groups and ideology than what Americans really think and want.
How many times have you heard Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, President Obama
or any number of their surrogates – and to be fair and honest, it does
happen on both sides of the aisle – begin a sentence with, “What
Americans really want...” or “The Average American thinks that...” It is
an insult to the intelligence of the citizenry, no matter how dumbed-down
the American populace has become.
Another facet to this intellectual arrogance is when an elected official
or public figure uses a “broad brush” to address an entire group or
demographic, regardless of whether it is favorably or unfavorably.
One example of this simplistic arrogance was illustrated on MSNBC’s
Countdown with Keith Olbermann, when the tired
sportscaster-turned-propagandist, Olbermann, provided a platform for the
marginally-talented Janeane Garofalo to say of Tea Party attendees:
“It’s not about bashing Democrats. It’s not about taxes; they have no
idea what the Boston Tea Party was about. They don’t know their history
at all. This is about hating a Black man in the White House. This is
racism, straight up. That is nothing but a bunch of tea-bagging rednecks
and there is no way around that.”
To Garofalo and Olbermann, anyone who attended one of the thousands
of Tea Parties around the country was a “tea-bagging redneck,” each and
every one of them. Not one of them every studied history and every
attendee was a racist. This is an example of painting an entire
demographic with a “broad brush” in an unfavorable manner.
Another event that provided examples of painting with a broad brush and
speaking for entire demographics happened in September in the
Phoenix-Mesa Arizona area when US Rep. Keith Ellison (P-MN) – I
designate the “P” for Progressive as all members of the Progressive
Caucus are Democrats – spoke at a fundraiser for the Arizona chapter of
CAIR, the Council for American Islamic Relations.
After announcing that he would indeed speak at the fundraiser for CAIR,
three federally elected officials from Arizona – US Sen. John Kyl
(R-AZ), US Rep. John Shadegg and US Rep. Trent Franks (R-AZ), wrote a
letter urging Congressman Ellison – the only declared Muslim in Congress
– to reconsider associating with CAIR and to cancel his appearance. The
Republican legislators cited the fact that CAIR has questionable ties to
the terror group Hamas as established by evidence submitted in the
recent Holy Land Foundation trial in which CAIR was named an unindicted
co-conspirator. Further, there have been several high-ranking CAIR
operatives who have been either indicted or convicted of having
transgressed the law:
▪
Randall Todd Royer, who has served as a communications specialist
and as a civil rights coordinator for CAIR, was charged with a variety
of firearms violations and attempting to mount a military attack against
a friendly nation, India, after he trained with the Lashkar-e-Taiba, a
Kashmir terrorist group that is listed on the State Departments
international terror list, linked with al-Qaeda.
▪
Bassem Khafagi, who served as community affairs director of the CAIR,
was accused of having ties to terrorism and was sentenced after pleading
guilty to bank and visa fraud.
▪
Siraj Wahhaj, CAIR Advisory Board member, was named by federal
prosecutors as one of the “unindicted persons who may be alleged as
co-conspirators” in a plot to blow up monuments in New York City.
So, as we can see, the questions surrounding CAIR, their activities and
their high-ranking members are certainly valid and anyone – especially a
federally elected official – would be wise to think long and hard about
associating with a group that apologizes for and includes Islamic
extremists.
But Ellison, a convert to Islam, chose to attend the event, ignoring the
requests from his fellow legislators. In fact, he
addressed the issue before taking the podium to celebrate Pres.
Obama’s “fresh start in relations with Islamic countries,” as reported
by Jim Walsh of
The Arizona Republic:
"’I would never associate myself with anyone even soft on terrorism,’
he said before the speech. ‘We all want to fight terror. We all want to
live in a safe community.’
“The fears Kyl, Franks and Shadegg expressed in the letter are
‘ridiculous,’ he said.
“If there is any truth to the allegations that CAIR supports the
Palestinian terrorist organization, Ellison said, there should be
arrests and prosecutions.”
In responding to the accusations leveled against CAIR, Ellison uses
the collective “we” indicating that he was speaking for the whole of the
Muslim community. Again, this is using a “broad brush” to address the
issues of CAIR, the organization, and the actions of its operatives. The
facts, as they present, certainly indicate that CAIR is conflicted, both
in its organizational loyalties and with regard to who it chooses to
lead the group.
Mr. Ellison’s response was championed by Asim Ameer in another article
in
The Arizona Republic (which has since been removed) in which
Mr. Ameer states:
“To label CAIR an ‘unindicted co-conspirator’ and as a ‘front group
for terrorism’ without any evidence is ludicrous...The US is a land of
laws. Baseless charges by enemies of American Muslims create hatred and
incite violence towards them. The people who are making these charges
should back them up with incontrovertible proof. Name-calling by biased
members of Congress is just mudslinging that is unbecoming of them.”
Evidenced by what I have pointed out earlier about CAIR’s legal and
prosecutorial woes, we can see that Mr. Ameer not only painted with a
“broad brush,” but did so disingenuously.
These irresponsible actions, declarations and writings by Mr. Ellison
and Mr. Ameer prompted a brave and necessary response from one of the
founders of the
Moderate Muslim Summit, Mr. Farid Ghadry, President of the Reform
Party of Syria. The summit was recently hosted by US Rep. Sue Myrick
(R-NC):
“I was concerned by statements made in two pieces published in The
Arizona Republic, one article by Jim Walsh under the title ‘US Rep.
Meets Group Accused of Terror Ties’ on September 19, and a piece by Asim
Ameer titled ‘Lawmakers Show Bias, Create Hatred,’ published on
September 26.
“With all due respects, Rep Keith Ellison (D-MN) doesn't represent the
Muslim American community in the US Congress just because, as Mr. Walsh
introduced him, he is ‘the only Muslim in Congress.’
“Ellison was elected in his district in Minnesota by American citizens
from all creeds. Lawmakers’ religions don't give them a special
privilege to hijack the representation of an entire religious community
of over 3 million individuals. He neither represents my community
nationwide in Congress nor does he even represent the entire spectrum of
opinions inside this community. His view about the so-called ‘fresh
start in relations with Islamic countries under President Barack Obama's
administration’ doesn't represent the views of those Muslim-Americans
who criticize cutting deals with Syrian, Saudi, Libyan and Iranian
regimes.
“Mr. Ellison meddled in intra-Muslim American politics by defending CAIR
against charges by other Muslims that some of its members were involved
in terrorism. Mr. Ellison must refrain from supporting organizations
receiving financial support from regimes abusing human rights of
millions of Muslims. It goes against everything this country stands for.
“Mr. Asim Ameer attacked three esteemed legislators whose concerns
reflect the feelings of many Muslim Americans. He claimed ‘CAIR
consistently criticized terrorist attacks by individuals, organizations
and countries.’ I never read any statement by this group condemning al
Qaeda, the Taliban and Hezbollah. Worse, he claimed, CAIR ‘has a history
of assisting the Department of Homeland Security and other law
enforcement agencies,’ a matter that endangers our national security as
Americans because of the groups links to Terror organizations.
“American Muslims have had enough of being hijacked by Jihadist
ideologues.”
Pres. Obama, as he traveled down the campaign path to the White
House, was correct about one thing: Words do matter. When we are
addressing issues as deadly serious as radical Islam, terrorism and the
funding of terrorist organizations, words matter. So do deeds. The
actions of CAIR and its operatives lend credence to the notion that they
should be held suspect when it comes to their motives and goals. To hide
behind the moniker of “advocate for the American-Muslim community” when
their high-ranking officials are engaged in nefarious deeds is not only
disingenuous, it is deceptive.
Mr. Ameer and Mr. Ellison, according to the facts of the matter – as
they present – are either ill-informed, naïve or sympathetic to CAIR’s
ulterior motives. Given the facts – as they present – Mr. Ellison would
be wise to speak for himself, instead of the whole of the
American-Muslim community, especially as the introspective debate about
how Muslims and non-Muslims will co-exist in American culture is taking
place.
About
Frank Salvato
Frank Salvato
is
the Executive Director and Director of Terrorism Research for
BasicsProject.org
a non-profit, non-partisan, 501(c)(3) research and education
initiative. His writing has been recognized by the US House
International Relations Committee and the Japan Center for
Conflict Prevention. His organization, BasicsProject.org,
partnered in producing the original national symposium series
addressing the root causes of radical Islamist terrorism. He is
a member of the
International Analyst Network.
He also serves as the managing editor for The New Media Journal.
Mr. Salvato has appeared on The O'Reilly Factor on FOX News
Channel, and is a regular guest on talk radio including on The
Captain's America Radio Show airing on AM1220 WSRQ and on the
Internet catering to the US Armed Forces around the world and on
The Roth Show with Dr. Laurie Roth syndicated nationally on the
USA Radio Network. His
opinion-editorials have been published by The American
Enterprise Institute, The Washington Times & Human Events and
are syndicated nationally. He is occasionally quoted in The
Federalist. Mr. Salvato is available for public speaking
engagements.