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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lane3 who wrote (192400)1/10/2007 8:54:06 AM
From: Tom Clarke  Respond to of 793955
 
Miracles Appear in the Strangest of Places
By Lisa Fabrizio
Published 1/10/2007 12:06:31 AM

They say that the Lord works in mysterious ways. Last year's remarks by Pope Benedict XVI -- when he spoke of the Qur'an's commands to spread Islam by the sword as incompatible with reason -- were met with the usual rage from many in the Muslim community and their sympathizers. Though it did not immediately seem so, this might just have signaled a watershed event in the global struggle against those who are most willing to use that sword.

Soon after the Pope's remarks, rare yet un-isolated cases of common sense seem to be breaking out all over and resistance, armed and otherwise, to the Islamist threat has manifested itself in some unexpected places. And although these voices still represent a woeful minority, they are no less welcome or hopeful.

When typical Islamist outrage threatened the cancellation of a Berlin staging of Mozart's Idomeneo which depicted the severed head of the Prophet Muhammad -- along with those of Jesus Christ, Buddha and the Greek god Poseidon -- German politicos reacted swiftly. Said Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit, without naming names:

Our ideas about openness, tolerance and freedom must be lived out on the offensive. Voluntary self-limitation gives those who fight against our values a confirmation in advance that we will not stand behind them.

But Bavarian state premier Edmund Stoiber went further, adding, "We must never give up our constitutional freedoms out of fear of Islamist thought-terrorism." Quite a remarkable reaction and one that was partially responsible for newly scheduled performances of the opera -- with the offending scene still included -- taking place without incident this month.

Meanwhile, deep in the heart of old Europe, Robert Redeker, a French philosophy professor, is still on the run in fear of his life from you know whom. His crime? An op-ed in the newspaper, Le Figaro, a translation of which is here. And although most of his countrymen have not been terribly forthcoming in his defense, the threats on Redeker's life were condemned by his fellow French philosophers who published a letter reading:

A handful of fanatics brandishes alleged religious laws to jeopardise our most basic freedoms. To which threats are now added the murmurings audible across Europe about the 'provocations' we must avoid in order not to antagonise these supposed foreign sensibilities. Times are getting tough in Europe. Now is not the moment for cowardice.

In Great Britain, Communities Secretary Ruth Kelly announced that funding will be cut off to Muslim groups that teach hate: "It is only by defending our values that we will prevent extremists radicalising future generations of terrorists." While Home Secretary John Reid added, "You don't have to love everything George W. Bush stands for to hate everything that Osama Bin Laden stands for."

And most recently in Somalia, Ethiopian forces have deposed the radical Islamic Courts Union that had controlled much of the country since early last year. On Monday, U.S. forces launched air strikes against terrorist elements there and the USS Eisenhower and three other warships have been dispatched to the Somali coast to block any retreat by sea they might seek.

Typically, al Qaeda's number-two man, Ayman al-Zawahiri released a statement urging "all Muslims to respond to the appeal for jihad in Somalia." But in the face of this, returning Somali president Yusuf Ahmed has vowed that there will be no negotiation with the fleeing Islamists. Most encouraging though, is the response of brave Somali Muslims, like Bashir Goth who wrote of the vanquished Islamists:

[A]s is often the case with all self-aggrandizing megalomaniacs, they fizzled into thin air when the hour of truth has arrived and all their bravado had ended into a farcical denouement. While they threw the young children they recruited in the name of jihad into the fray, the Islamist leadership took flight liked scared chickens. None of them was reported to have died heroically fighting at the front. They just burst like a bubble. Even their prolific website qaadisiya.com fell silent. Although its editors have spewed enough hatred against the West and sang daily hymns for the Sept. 11 suicide bombers and all jihadist martyrs of the world, they couldn't dare to sign off the last chapter of their fantasy medieval caliphate.

Now it is time for the people of Mogadishu to reclaim their freedoms and their true religion. Time to read the Koran with piety and not with politics; ...It is time to throw away the Arab head rags; the sign of the shabby dressed Islamists; and time to be proud of our native names, cleansing our ears of the alien Arab noms de guerre of the Islamists. It is time to let our women come out to the sunshine and swim with their children in the lido beach; time to shave the beards, watch cinema, and let our youth revel, sing, dance, and ring in the New Year with Mohammed Suleiman's eternal lyrics... "Be a year that brings us good fortune and high expectations." Amen.

Lisa Fabrizio is a columnist who hails from Connecticut. You may write her at mailbox@lisafab.com.

spectator.org



To: Lane3 who wrote (192400)1/10/2007 2:12:03 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793955
 
Lane, First read the article unclewest linked. Then check Michele's link...there are MANY links to the problems at the border.

Some people evidently don't see the danger. Ostrichs don't want to see the danger. Most of us don't know what to do about it. Most won't see there is a problem, until it is too late, and costs America perhaps Millions of lives, and Billions of additional dollars trying to pick up the pieces. Literally.

Michelle Malkin posted the article below in 2004...Still, not many are paying attention. She has more links here: michellemalkin.com

Immigration & Foreign Affairs

No Extra Scrutiny for Middle Eastern Illegals at Mexico Border
by Joseph A. D'Agostino

Posted Aug 09, 2004


humanevents.com





U.S. government policy requires that young Middle Eastern men who are caught crossing illegally into the United States from Mexico be treated the same as illegal aliens from elsewhere in the world--meaning that if they don't have criminal records, don't appear on government watch lists and are not deemed to be suspicious by the federal law enforcement officers who interview them, they most likely will be released into the U.S. population.

All 19 of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers were young men from Saudi Arabia and Egypt. None of them had criminal records, not all were on watch lists, and few apparently raised significant suspicions among American border or visa authorities.

"The law does not differentiate based on nationality. So enforcement does not differ based on nationality," says Reed Little, Detention and Enforcement Officer for the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). He added that ICE officials must justify their actions before immigration judges.

Asked if a 25-year-old man from Saudi Arabia would be treated at all differently from other illegal aliens coming across the Mexican border, ICE spokesman Manny Van Pelt said, "No."

Van Pelt said the government's general practice is to release apprehended aliens into the United States without requiring bond pending their deportation hearing, unless they have criminal records, are flagged in a government database as a potential threat, or their interviews with agents reveal a potential threat. "It's just a matter of interviewing them and running their names through the database. . . ," he said. "If everything is clean, he will be issued a Notice to Appear." That requires the illegal alien to appear in court at a later date, he said. Illegal aliens deemed to be a threat or who have criminal records are detained until their hearings.

Van Pelt and Little said there is no justification for singling out people from the Middle East and cited Richard Reid, an Englishman who tried to detonate his shoe on an airliner, as an example of a terrorist threat from another part of the world. "There have been people suspected and accused of being Irish terrorists," Van Pelt noted. Also, said Little, immigration agents have to justify their actions with evidence before judges. "We have to be able to inform the immigration judge why we are holding a person," he said. "'He's a young man from a Middle Eastern country' doesn't sound very good."

In just the McAllen, Tex., sector of the Southern border, 19,460 nationals other than Mexicans (OTMs) were apprehended between Oct. 1, 2003, and July 28, 2004, according to a local Border Patrol spokesman. One of those was Farida Ahmed, a Muslim woman with a South African passport on her way to New York. She was detained at McAllen International Airport by astute Border Patrol agents on July 19. She is charged with entering the country illegally, possessing an altered passport, and lying to investigators.

ICE does not keep central statistics on OTMs apprehended crossing the Southern border. Eddie Flores, spokesman for the McAllen sector of the Border Patrol, said that in his sector, foreigners of numerous nationalities have been caught sneaking into the country from Mexico. After Mexicans, he said, Hondurans and El Salvadorans are the most numerous. But he could not provide a precise breakdown, he said, because he wasn't supposed to give one out and also because he didn't have one anyway. "Washington told me to hold that back, but I don't have a breakdown," he said.

Van Pelt said he could not provide statistics for how many OTMs have come across the entire length of the Southern border this fiscal year or what has happened to them since they were apprehended. "We don't have a national database that tracks that," he said. "We are going to have to ask each sector for their figures." He said that it would take time for such statistics to be gathered.

A group of 12 congressmen led by Rep. Tom Tancredo (R.-Colo.), chairman of the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus, wrote a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge on August 3 asking for statistics on OTMs apprehended on the Southern border and a breakdown of their nationalities. Tancredo spokesman Carlos Espinosa said, "The letter has been assigned to Border and Transportation Security, and [they] said they have set an August 18 deadline to respond to us."

Flores said that in his sector nationals from unusual countries such as South Africa get extra attention from the Border Patrol when they are apprehended. "We don't commonly encounter people from South Africa in the McAllen sector," he said. "Since 9/11, we scrutinize such people." The McAllen sector includes Brownsville, Harlingen, and Corpus Christi.

Mr. D'Agostino, former associate editor of HUMAN EVENTS, is vice president for Communications at the Population Research Institute.