First Amendment for Jihad? (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Moshe Dann 05/22/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/05/22/first-amendment-for-jihad/
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Two months ago, Tareq Mehanna, an American-born citizen from
Massachusetts, was convicted of conspiracy to provide material
support to al Qaeda, providing material support to terrorists (and
conspiracy to do so), conspiracy to commit murder in a foreign
country, conspiracy to make false statements to the FBI, and two
counts of making false statements. He traveled to Yemen to get
training in order to fight against American troops in Afghanistan,
but failed. His use of the Internet to propagate Jihad, however, was
defended by civil libertarians as “free speech,” protected by the
First Amendment.
But Jihad is not philosophy. It is a call to action, not meditation
or self-examination. A central tenet of Islam, it can mean helping
others and self-improvement. But for most Muslims it means a divinely
mandated war against “infidels” – non-Moslems. It can take many
forms: piloting planes into buildings, blowing up planes with hidden
bombs, murdering people who are accused of insulting Mohammed and the
Koran, and urging others to engage in violence – that is, incitement.
It is also incumbent on Muslims anywhere, anytime, and for any reason
they personally feel applicable. Since Islam does not have a
hierarchy of authority, although some leaders are more acceptable
than others, one can pick and choose. There are basically no rules or
restrictions. One can follow a local sheikh collecting charity, or a
preacher exhorting homicidal attacks.
Had Mehanna succeeded in being trained to kill, and if he and his
friends who accompanied him had survived and returned to America,
they might have opened a 7-11, or they might have plotted another 9-
11.
The question is not whether Mehanna has the right to preach and
publish what he believes – under the First Amendment he does – but
whether Jihad is part of a legitimate accepted dialogue. Where were
the people in his family and community who might have dissuaded him?
Why have Muslim-American leaders and organizations remained silent?
Instead of apologizing for him and organizing support groups (“Free
Tareq”) there should be a thorough and serious self-criticism.
If not, there will be many more Americans like Mehanna, Major Nidal
Hassan who murdered 13 and wounded 29 people in Texas, and Najibullah
Zazi and Adis Mendunjenin, from Queens, NYC, who were convicted in
May, 2012 of plotting to bomb the subway and other terrorist acts.
Americans have spent a great deal of money and sacrificed many
thousands of lives to assist Muslims in Iraq, Afghanistan and other
Muslim countries to live in freedom, to establish democratic
governments and improve their lives. The payback should not be Jihad,
and certainly not from loyal American citizens.
The problem is not only terrorist organizations, like al Qaida, but
so-called religious leaders who sanction and fuel hatred and
terrorism. Combating them is not only a matter of law, but of
education.
In order to defeat Jihadism among Muslim-Americans, the message must
be clear. Jihadism is un-American. Like KKK racism and neo-Nazism, it
violates American norms and values and is therefore unacceptable.
Minds are dark places, full of holes. They are not dangerous, until
they are, but by then it’s often too late. (Copyright © 2012
FrontPageMagazine.com 05/22/12)
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