Cal Thomas: We Need To Understand Radical Islam's Goal.
We need to understand radical Islam's goal
Following the hacking death of a British soldier by two alleged
Islamic extremists, Prime Minister David Cameron said, “There is nothing
in Islam that justifies this truly dreadful act.”
Winston Churchill thought otherwise, but he lived in a time before political correctness ran amok and drew on his personal experiences serving in the Sudan and in the Crimean War.
In his 1899 book “The River War,” Churchill described what he witnessed in countries where Islam ruled: “Individual Moslems may show splendid qualities, but the influence of the religion paralyzes the social development of those who follow it. No stronger retrograde force exists in the world. Far from being moribund, Mohammedanism is a militant and proselytizing faith.”
Given the secular condition of modern Europe and the huge influx of radical Muslims, many of whom carry with them earthly agendas, which prime minister is more credible?
A documentary released last fall, but largely ignored, might be a useful guide. It’s called “Jihad in America: The Grand Deception.” The film by the Investigative Project on Terrorism, exposes the tangled web of Islamic front groups in America that are backed by the radical Muslim Brotherhood.
It was what they say about themselves and about their goals that is most revealing. In the film, the late Israr Ahmed of the Islamic Society of North America says: “I find there are only two things which are open to our movements: ballot or bullet, nothing in between.”
Former FBI special agent Robert Stauffer headed an investigation in the 1980s of Muslim Brotherhood finances, according to the film’s narrator. Stauffer discovered that the Islamic Society of North America, another Muslim Brotherhood front located outside Plainfield, Ind., had received “Millions and millions of dollars” through its North American Islamic Trust, which, he says, “served as a financial holding company for Muslim Brotherhood-related groups.” The money, he says, was wired into the United States from Islamic countries, including Iran, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Afghanistan, Egypt, Malaysia and Libya.
Much of this was prior to Sept. 11, but given the existence and growth of Muslim student associations on American college campuses (the documentary says there are 40 such groups) and other Muslim organizations, the money must still be available.
Winston Churchill thought otherwise, but he lived in a time before political correctness ran amok and drew on his personal experiences serving in the Sudan and in the Crimean War.
In his 1899 book “The River War,” Churchill described what he witnessed in countries where Islam ruled: “Individual Moslems may show splendid qualities, but the influence of the religion paralyzes the social development of those who follow it. No stronger retrograde force exists in the world. Far from being moribund, Mohammedanism is a militant and proselytizing faith.”
Churchill said only
Christianity had sheltered Europe and were it not for that faith, “the
civilization of modern Europe might fall, as fell the civilization of
ancient Rome.”
Given the secular condition of modern Europe and the huge influx of radical Muslims, many of whom carry with them earthly agendas, which prime minister is more credible?
One of the men arrested
in London spoke of his motivation: “The only reason we have killed this
man today is because Muslims are dying daily by British soldiers.”
What Westerners struggle
to figure out is how to distinguish Islamists from moderate Muslims and
how to recognize the true Islamist when they are taught to deceive us
about their radical beliefs.
A documentary released last fall, but largely ignored, might be a useful guide. It’s called “Jihad in America: The Grand Deception.” The film by the Investigative Project on Terrorism, exposes the tangled web of Islamic front groups in America that are backed by the radical Muslim Brotherhood.
The documentary reveals
how these groups have penetrated the highest levels of American
government and culture. Zuhdi Jasser, who heads the American Islamic
Forum for Democracy, says, “Their dream is the creation of an Islamic
state ... their strategy in America is to use America’s freedom and
liberties in order to achieve that dream.” The same might be said of
Britain.
Douglas Farah, former
West Africa bureau chief for The Washington Post says, “It doesn’t
matter what we say about them. It matters tremendously what they say
about themselves and to each other.”
It was what they say about themselves and about their goals that is most revealing. In the film, the late Israr Ahmed of the Islamic Society of North America says: “I find there are only two things which are open to our movements: ballot or bullet, nothing in between.”
In “The Grand Deception,”
Amir Abdel Malik Ali of the Islamic Circle of North America, speaking
at a 2003 event in Philadelphia said, “Democracy does not equal freedom.
No, we do not want to democratize Islam. We want (to) Islamize
democracy.”
And Abdur-Rahman
Muhammad, a former Muslim militant, offered, “Ultimately the Muslim
Brotherhood wants to establish an Islamic state in America. They believe
that Western civilization is corrupt, evil, is decadent and they want
to dismantle it.”
Former FBI special agent Robert Stauffer headed an investigation in the 1980s of Muslim Brotherhood finances, according to the film’s narrator. Stauffer discovered that the Islamic Society of North America, another Muslim Brotherhood front located outside Plainfield, Ind., had received “Millions and millions of dollars” through its North American Islamic Trust, which, he says, “served as a financial holding company for Muslim Brotherhood-related groups.” The money, he says, was wired into the United States from Islamic countries, including Iran, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Afghanistan, Egypt, Malaysia and Libya.
Much of this was prior to Sept. 11, but given the existence and growth of Muslim student associations on American college campuses (the documentary says there are 40 such groups) and other Muslim organizations, the money must still be available.
The British and Americans
can listen to politicians who aid and abet the advance of radical
Islam, or they can heed the words of Sayyid Syeed, director of the
Islamic Society of North America. Film footage shows Syeed speaking in
Chicago in 2006. He said, “Our job is to change the Constitution of
America.”
Labels: Religion
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