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Showing posts with label Islamic subversion on Colleges and Universities.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Islamic subversion on Colleges and Universities.. Show all posts

Popular Professor murdered at New York University. Hate Crime?

Grad student Abdulsalam al-Zahrani held in stabbing death of Prof. Emeritus Richard Antoun



Of course it is labeled 'not a hate crime'
for now. The MSM rarely calls crimes
involving Muslims 'hate crimes', even when
it is clear that it was a hate crime. Any
relationship between this killing taking place
near Islamberg, home to an Islamist group that
is quite radical and full of hatred? Of course not.
It must be the damned Jews again, or those
radical Copts out of Egypt.



Prof. Richard Antoun




Abdulsalam Al-Zahrani





New York Daily News
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2009/12/06/2009-12-06_grad_student_held_in_slay_of_professor.html

This happening at colleges all across America! Islamic subversion.

BREAKING! APOSTATE NONIE DARWISH CANCELED AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY AND PRINCETON DUE TO MUSLIM PRESSURE
From Atlas Shrugs




They will stop at nothing until this
is achieved. God help us!


Nonie Darwish who was scheduled to
speak at Princeton and Columbia had
her speeches due to islamic student
groups protesting her appreances. This
is nothing but the arresting of free speech
in America. This is happening all the time
at our colleges and universities. The forces
of Islam are out to stop ANY and ALL criticism
of Islam or Muslims. How do you think those
who lost family and friends at Fort Hood, on
9/11 feel about this? I urge you to go to Pamela's
site: Atlas Shrugs, for in depth exposure on this.
Nonie Darwish knows all about being a woman
under Islam. She is a brave and courageous lady.


Atlas Shrugs

http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2009/11/breaking-apostate-nonie-darwish-canceled-at-columbia-university-and-princeton-due-to-muslim-pressure.html

Islam in America: Kurt Westergaard Visits Princeton and Yale

Islam on Campus: A Cartoonist Visits the Ivy League

Brussels Journal: by Paul Belien. 10-13-2009

Here is an article from the Brussels Journal.
I have copied the full article here for you.
Link is below the article. If you are not familiar
with Kurt Westergaard, I hope you will read this
article. The audience and the reactions shown to
this wonderful cartoonist are typical of the
Islamic driven responses at many colleges today
across the United States. Please note what Rabbi
Hausman states towards the end of the article.
Telling words indeed. Islam never wants or will
accept responsiblity for its words, actions, or
violence. If you need an example of  Mr. Westergaard's
cartoon you can find it on my blog page. Kurt
Westergaard has nothing to apologize for. Islam does.

Islam on Campus: A Cartoonist Visits the Ivy League


From the desk of Paul Belien on Tue, 2009-10-13 12:39

In early October, Kurt Westergaard, a Danish cartoonist, visited Princeton and Yale, two of America’s top universities, to speak to students, who are supposed to be tomorrow’s elite. The students did not feel any sympathy – indeed, were almost hostile – towards Mr. Westergaard, an artist who has been living under constant police protection since he drew a cartoon of Muhammad, the founder of Islam, four years ago.

Mr. Westergaard arrived at both Princeton and Yale heavily guarded by policemen. Ten officers kept watch inside the room – with more on guard outside – when he addressed his audience in Princeton. Such is life for Mr. Westergaard these days. “When, early in September 2005, I got a brief request from my editor to draw my impression of the prophet Muhammad, I had little idea of what I was getting myself into,” he told the students.

He drew the Islamic prophet with a bomb in his turban. “My cartoon,” Mr. Westergaard said, “was an attempt to expose those fanatics who have justified a great number of bombings, murders and other atrocities with reference to the sayings of their prophet. If many Muslims thought that their religion did not condone such acts, they might have stood up and declared that the men of violence had misrepresented the true meaning of Islam. Very few of them did so.”

On the contrary, as if to prove that Mr. Westergaard had hit the raw nerve of Islam, he had to go into hiding when Muslim radicals threatened to kill him for “insulting” their prophet. He and his wife lived in more than ten different government-provided safe houses before the Danish authorities turned his own house into a bunker, with electronic surveillance cameras, bullet-proof windows, steel doors and a panic room.

The Danish cartoon affair led to riots and attacks on Danish embassies and properties in Islamic countries, resulting in the death of over 130 people. The threats against Mr. Westergaard are still as imminent as they were four years ago. Last year, the Danish police arrested two Tunisians who were planning to force their way into the Westergaard home and assassinate the cartoonist. “I have been living under police protection and I expect to do so for the rest of my life,” Mr. Westergaard told his audience at Princeton and Yale.

Nevertheless, despite the price he and his wife have had to pay, the 74-year old artist does not regret that he drew the cartoon. He has also consistently refused to apologize to those whose feelings he might have hurt. To him, it is a matter of principle. “Free speech must have limits, but these limits should be determined by law and by precedents established by the courts. […] My cartoon was well within the law, and nobody except some fanatical Muslims said otherwise. As a matter of fact, 22 Muslim organizations in Denmark went to court in an attempt to get the cartoons censored. The case was dismissed as groundless. Then there is the matter of taste and good manners. Here, I must also plead my innocence. My cartoon was construed as an attempt to hurt the feelings of every Muslim in the world. That was never my intention.”

The cartoon which Mr. Westergaard drew has become an icon of our time. It is the only drawing in recent history over which people have been killed and whose maker has to live under a permanent threat of assassination. Mr. Westergaard, invariably dressed in black and red, “the colors,” he says “of anarchism,” shrugs when asked about his fears. “When you are old, there is not so much to lose,” he says.

Moreover, he explains, he sees no reason why Muslims should be treated differently from other people. He has also drawn things which Christians and Jews found to be offensive, including a “pro-Palestinian” cartoon of Nazi camp prisoners with the Nazi guards substituted by Israelis and the prisoners by Palestinians with the word ‘Arab’ on their Star of David instead of ‘Jude.’ “It was a pro-Palestinian article which I had to illustrate,” he explains. “That is my job. My illustrations have to be in line with the message of the article.” Though Danish Jews were insulted, and told Mr. Westergaard so, they never threatened to kill him, nor did they demand apologies.

The Danish cartoon affair has become the most important free speech cause of our time. Since the right to free speech is indivisible, it includes, as Mr. Westergaard said at Princeton and Yale, “the right to treat Islam, Muhammad and Muslims exactly as you would any other religion, prophet or group of believers. If we no longer had that right, one could only conclude that the country had succumbed to de facto sharia law.”

Despite their displeasure with the cartoon Mr. Westergaard had drawn, the Danish politicians have stood by him, refusing to criticize him, let alone apologize for his drawing, and providing him constant protection against his would-be assassins.

How would the American establishment react, however, if confronted with a similar case? American newspapers have refused to reprint his cartoons, even as illustrations to articles about the case. Yale University Press has published a whole book about the affair, without showing the cartoon. While an image of the cartoon was projected on a screen during Kurt Westergaard’s talk at Princeton, the university authorities at Yale refused to do so when Mr. Westergaard was giving his talk there. They told Mr. Westergaard that they would only allow the cartoon to be shown in a separate room, “so that students who do not want to see it, do not have to see it,” thereby treating the drawing as they would treat a vile piece of pornography. As it turned out, however, the cartoon was not even shown in a separate room.

Despite the Danish cartoon affair being a watershed test for the freedom of the Western media to criticize religions and ideologies without fear of violent reprisal, only a small number of students turned up at both Princeton and Yale to hear Mr. Westergaard plead his case. At Princeton, there was a turnout of about sixty people, at Yale of about eighty. Both at Princeton and at Yale, half of the audience was Muslim, while the other half either agreed with them or was intimidated into appearing to do so. Perhaps the non-Muslims among America’s Ivy League students are simply unaware of the Danish cartoon affair or do not care about it.

In both Princeton and Yale, the university authorities had ensured that the Muslim voice critical of Mr. Westergaard would be heard. In Yale, they even had a fifth of the audience seats specifically reserved for Muslims, though more showed up.

At Princeton, the official Muslim campus chaplain was sitting on the panel. He was very critical of the Dane, but was prepared to debate with him. He also made no objection to the cartoon being shown. At Yale, however, the Muslim chaplain, one Omer Bajwa, claimed that Mr. Westergaard’s visit to Yale was part of a plot by Geert Wilders, a Dutch politician, and Daniel Pipes, an American scholar. Both Mr. Wilders and Mr. Pipes are critical of Islamism. Lars Hedegaard, the Danish president of the International Free Press Society (IFPS), which had organized Mr. Westergaard’s visit to America, denied this, pointing out that “Mr. Wilders and Mr. Pipes are not even aware that Mr. Westergaard is here.” Mr. Bajwa also wanted to know from Mr. Westergaard “what your son, who has converted to Islam, thinks about your cartoon and your refusal to apologize?” As it happens, Mr. Westergaard’s son has not converted to Islam, nor have any of his other children.

The Yale audience – all of them students whose parents pay up to $50,000 per year to send them there – was even more hostile to Mr. Westergaard than the students at Princeton. One of them told Mr. Westergaard” “You feel unsafe today, which is unfortunate, but you should realize that your presence here today has made thousands of other people feel unsafe.” This type of statement makes a moral equation between attempting to assassinate someone and drawing a cartoon.

Rabbi Jonathan Hausman, who attended the event at Yale as a guest of the IFPS, was shocked by what he had to witness:

I was disappointed at the inability of those in attendance amongst the Yale community to place responsibility for the violence that has transpired on those who manifest such responsibility. […] Every questioner seemed to want to misplace blame.

Further, it is clear that the university suffers from the malaise of relativist truth and the multicultural ethic. There are no universal truths any longer. When I was in college, it seemed that the point of education at the university level was to use the subject matter under study to encourage independent, critical thinking. Today, all truths are equal. I abjure this notion.

In the final analysis, I believe that the university is lost.

The American columnist Diana West, an alumni of Yale, speaks of her former university as a “wreck.” Mr. Westergaard will not need to draw a cartoon of Yale University upon his return home. It has made a caricature of itself.


Post script

After his visit to Yale, Mr. Westergaard flew to Toronto where he was interviewed by the National Post, one of Canada’s major national newspapers. The next day, the paper published an interview with the Danish cartoonist on its first page, including the controversial cartoon. No major US paper, including its liberal flagships, has dared to do this so far.

http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/4122

Muslim Student Association trying to get Geert Wilders Event cancelled at Temple University.

The latest attempt by the MSA at a major university to stifle any
and all criticism of Islam. Just like the OIC is gradually doing
through the United Nation of Islam. Geert Wilders has a message
that must be heard! There is a reason Islam is trying to silence
this man's voice. He lives under security 24/7 and has had many
death threats issued against him by Islamofascists. Here's to Temple
University standing strong and not playing the dhimmi fool and rolling over,
playing dead to Islamic intimidation tactics.

David Horowitz has this called correctly. Let's hope Temple
University is not listening to MSA and will llet freedom ring.

Here is the complete article.


Temple Muslim Students Association Attempts To Shut Down Wilders Event - The Philadelphia Bulletin


Temple Muslim Students Association Attempts To Shut Down Wilders Event


By David Horowitz

Sunday, October 18, 2009

The Temple Muslim Students Association is attempting to shut down the scheduled appearance of Geert Wilders on Oct. 20. As part of its Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week, and its campaign to Stop the Campus War Against Israel and the Jews, the David Horowitz Freedom Center is sponsoring appearances by Dutch Parliamentarian Geert Wilders at Temple and Columbia universities (Oct. 20 and 21). The Muslim Students Association has issued a statement condemning the event and calling on the Temple Administration to close it down. The David Horowitz Freedom Center statement follows:

David Horowitz Freedom Center Response To The Muslim Students Association

The Temple Muslim Students Association has issued a call to the Temple University administration to censor the forthcoming campus appearance of Dutch Parliamentarian Geert Wilders on the 20th of October, which is sponsored by the David Horowitz Freedom Center. The Temple administration should reject this attack on the First Amendment rights of all members of the Temple community.

It is not surprising that the Muslim Students Association would seek to shut down the free speech of Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders who has been an outspoken critic of Islamic terrorists and Islamic attacks on Jews and other religions. Assaults on the First Amendment and efforts to censor critics of radical Islam are, in fact, typical of the tactics used by the Muslim Students Association, the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the Muslim American Society, all groups which support the jihad against the west and are part of the network created by the Muslim Brotherhood, which is the parent organization of the terrorist groups al-Qaeda and Hamas. The faculty advisor for Temple MSA is presently a member of the Muslim Brotherhood.

It is the height of hypocrisy for the Muslim Students Association to accuse Geert Wilders of spreading hate or anyone of being a hate group. Chapters of MSA at UC Irvine and Ohio State have raised money for the terrorist group Hamas whose goal — as stated in its official charter — is the destruction of the Jewish state and the extermination of the Jews. Speakers sponsored by the MSA have called for the execution of homosexuals, war against the United States and the destruction of the Jewish state and the extermination of the Jews. Every year, on the day commemorating the birth of the Jewish state, the MSA sponsors nationwide campus protests against the existence of the Jewish state calling its creation the “nakba” – the catastrophe. This is an act of genocidal hate.

Temple MSA refers to the fact that security will be necessary at the event as proof that Geert Wilders is dangerous. This is the perfect Orwellian mindset of supporters of the jihad. The threat to the Wilders event making security measures necessary comes from Muslim radicals who have already assassinated two prominent Dutch critics of Islamic terrorism – Pym Fortun and Theo Van Gogh (who not incidentally both happened to be gay).

In point of fact Wilders has not been tried by any Dutch court, and was recently exonerated by a British court which declared the ban on his entry illegal.

The Temple community should reject the call by the MSA to censor free speech on the Temple campus, and should recognize it for what it is – an assault on the right of all Americans to have a democracy that is inclusive, tolerant and respectful of the rights of others.

- David Horowitz, Craig Snider For the David Horowitz Freedom Center Philadelphia