Kevin Sorbo thinks bombing a mosque is a joke

Kevin Sorbo as HerculesKevin Sorbo, former star of the TV series Hercules: The Legendary Journeys, is fond of denouncing the liberal consensus in Hollywood and has set himself up as a spokesperson for the Christian right.

He is particularly outraged by political correctness, which he claims is “melting our moral compass” and results in discrimination against Christianity in favour of Islam. “I don’t understand this ‘please embrace the Muslim religion, but not Christians'”, he complains.

In 2010 Sorbo fronted a documentary, produced by the Christian film company Cloud Ten Pictures, entitled The 12 Biggest Lies. Along with “men and women are equal” and “the earth is billions of years old”, these supposed lies included “Islam is a religion of peace”. Among the “experts” who appeared in the documentary were notorious Islamophobes such as Nonie Darwish.

One of them, Jack Kinsella of the Christian Zionist Hal Lindsey Ministries, derided what he called “the popular myth” that the majority of Muslims are non-violent. “If you’re going to use the Muslim definition of what is a good Muslim, then Osama bin Laden is a good Muslim,” he asserted.

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Ed Husain: can’t he be persuaded to go back to New York?

Bad news. Ed Husain, formerly of the Quilliam Foundation, has returned to the UK. Predictably, one of his first public acts has been to whip up fear and prejudice against fellow Muslims who oppose Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza or even just peacefully follow their faith by wearing the hijab or niqab. In a comment piece for the Evening Standard, Husain writes:

I have just returned home to London after three years of living in New York. There, I met American Muslim leaders fully at home in the US and among the most patriotic Americans I know. They support their soldiers at home and abroad….

But what I see and hear among activist Muslims in London worries me. At mass demonstrations for “Free Palestine” at the weekend, some chanted, “Obama, what do you have to say? How many kids have you killed today?” on a day when the US government was trying to rescue Yazidis in Iraq. If Palestine is to be freed, it should be freed from Hamas.

Socially, there is the rise of children at primary schools across the capital wearing hijab, or headscarves. This is a sign of separatism, a desire to assert difference from other children decided by parents. I see niqabs or face-covers for women, and British Asian Muslim men wearing Arab clothes that our visitors from the Gulf readily discard. How did we become silent at this physical changing of our city’s face?

Politically, being visibly Muslim is fast becoming a statement of rebellion.

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Black flag at gates of east London council estate ‘was not an ISIS flag’ say police

Young Muslims today defended the flying of a black flag above the gates of an east London council estate. Youths at the gates to the Will Crooks estate, in Poplar, branded objectors to the flag – which has been adopted by some jihadist groups – as “racist”.

The flag was removed yesterday for the second time following two visits from Met officers in as many days. It was hung there alongside the Palestinian flag as part of an “end the siege in Gaza” protest.

Today one youth outside the estate said: “It’s just racists complaining. If it was the St George’s flag, it would be alright. But this is our version and there’s this big reaction.” Another added: “I don’t understand why it has caused so much reaction. All it is is a declaration of the belief in Allah. It’s not the ISIS flag.”

The first flag was taken down by local nun, Sister Christine Frost, 77, on Friday, after she suspected it had been hoisted there by “naive young hot heads.” However, it reappeared before local community leaders decided to remove it yesterday afternoon after police visited the estate in Poplar High Street.

A Met spokesman said they first attended on Friday but the flag had been removed when they arrived.

They added: “Police were made aware of a flag displayed at the Will Crooks Estate again on Sunday, August 10. Officers attended the venue, spoke to residents and met local community leaders who removed the flag voluntarily. It was not an ISIS flag. There are no criminal offences arising from this incident.”

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Douglas Murray on free speech – fine if you’re inciting hatred against Muslims, unacceptable if you’re condemning Israel’s war crimes

Robert Spencer and Douglas MurrayFollowing Sayeeda Warsi’s admirable decision to resign from the government over its shameful response to Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, the BBC decided that it would be a good idea to invite the notorious Islamophobe, Douglas Murray of the Henry Jackson Society, to appear on Newsnight to discuss the issue.

Murray sneeringly described Warsi as having been “a bit of a nuisance” to David Cameron, asserted that her resignation was motivated not by political principle but by resentment at her failure to get a ministry of her own, and went on to accuse Warsi of “creating herself as effectively the minister for Muslims”.

Ming Campbell of the Liberal Democrats, who had to struggle against Murray’s attempts to talk over him, argued that Israel’s actions in Gaza amounted to a violation of international law. Murray replied that such criticisms of Israel had encouraged “a grassroots movement particularly of young Muslims in this country who feel very whipped up by this, and people like Ming Campbell and Sayeeda Warsi have to be extremely careful before they start accusing the state of Israel of war crimes”. Although Murray didn’t spell it out, the implication was that critics of the Israeli government were provoking violent extremism among Muslim youth.

Last week Murray appeared in a Spectator video of a debate with Ben Soffa of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign in which he made the same point, much more clearly. (Well, I say “debate”, but it ended up descending into a lengthy monologue by Murray, who is evidently unhappy listening to views that are contrary to his own.) Here Murray stated explicitly that those who claim the wholesale slaughter of civilians carried out by the IDF in Gaza amounts to a breach of international law are responsible for promoting antisemitic violence.

Murray warned that “you might get young Muslims and others who think Jews are responsible for this because Israel is committing war crimes … if they see very wilful throwing around of accusations of for instance war crimes, it’s not surprising, given that, some people will feel whipped up into thinking the way we will respond to this is to raise awareness by violence, by intimidation, by thuggery”. He declared: “if you do that kind of thing, you are whipping up mobs into action.” Those who accuse the Israeli government and armed forces of committing such crimes, Murray asserted, are “significantly fuelling attacks on Jews, hatred of Jews, around the world”.

Murray thinks he’s a very clever man, but apparently he lacks the intelligence to work out that the primary reason for outrage at Israel’s actions in Gaza is that large numbers of innocent people have been killed, including an estimated 373 children. Whether or not people argue that this mass slaughter is contrary to international law is an entirely secondary factor. What actually provokes anger is family homes reduced to rubble, bloodied corpses strewn around the blasted streets and the horrific sight of dead Palestinian babies.

The argument that the killings in Gaza should be categorised as war crimes is in any case hardly a fringe view. Two weeks ago, at an emergency conference of the UN Human Rights Council, Navi Pillay stated that Israel’s military offensive had not done enough to protect civilians. “There seems to be a strong possibility that international law has been violated, in a manner that could amount to war crimes,” she argued. According to Murray’s reasoning, the mere expression of that opinion amounted to the incitement of hatred and mob violence against Jews.

It is not difficult to see what is going on here. Murray’s objective is to suppress any questioning of the legality of Israel’s military policy in Gaza and discredit critics of Zionist state terrorism by painting them as antisemites.

Of course, Murray takes a very different approach to the incitement of hatred against Muslims. While he claims that forthright condemnation of Israel’s military policy in Gaza is unacceptable because it promotes violent antisemitism, when it comes to vilifying Muslims he is a belligerent defender of free speech, for himself and others who share his views, without showing the slightest concern for the possible consequences of their expressions of anti-Muslim sentiment.

In 2006 Murray was a featured speaker at the Pym Fortuyn Memorial Conference in The Hague, alongside people like Robert Spencer of Jihad Watch – the US anti-Muslim extremist banned from entering the UK last year, whom Murray has hailed as “a very brilliant scholar and writer”. In his speech Murray claimed that the “creeping increase of dhimmitude” was facilitating a Muslim takeover of the West and argued that, in order to counter the process of Islamification, “conditions for Muslims in Europe must be made harder across the board”.

Just imagine what Murray’s response would be if a supporter of the Palestinian cause reacted to the slaughter in Gaza by claiming that, in order to frustrate a plot to establish Jewish domination over society, “conditions for Jews in Europe must be made harder across the board”. Murray would furiously denounce this as the most revolting antisemitism, fuelling hatred and violence against the Jewish community – and in that case he would certainly be right. But Murray felt quite entitled to deploy the same appalling rhetoric himself, directed against Muslims.

Along with Robert Spencer, another of Murray’s heroes from the international “counterjihad” movement is the Danish Islamophobe and English Defence League admirer Lars Hedegaard. Murray indignantly condemned (“why do people keep trying to silence such defenders of free speech?”) the decision to prosecute Hedegaard over an interview in which he stated:

“When a Muslim man rapes a woman, it is his right to do so…. A loose woman, a woman who is not under the protection and the guidance of her guardian is basically free to be raped. If she moves around in the city without any guardian, you can freely rape her. She is your slave…. Sweden I think is probably the most prominent example of this in the West, where Swedish girls are raped. Gang-raped etc. etc. There is nothing wrong in it, viewed from an Islamic perspective. This is your right. You are even obliged to do that.”

If anything could be characterised as “whipping up mobs into action” it was that. Yet, in a puff-piece for the Spectator, Murray not only failed to criticise Hedegaard but dismissed this as “hate-speech” in ironic quotation marks, implying that it was nothing of the sort. He reserved his condemnation for Hope Not Hate who, entirely accurately, had included Hedegaard in their Counter-Jihad Report. Murray claimed, without providing any evidence whatsoever to back up the charge, that HNH were therefore to blame for inspiring an attack on Hedegaard.

So Murray’s attitude to freedom of expression is to say the least rather inconsistent. When he and his friends whip up hostility towards Muslims, even if they use the most vile and provocative language, they are merely exercising their right to free speech and bear no responsibility for the likely results of their inflammatory words. But when someone expresses an opinion that is opposed to Murray’s own views, whether on the “counterjihad” movement or the military policy of the state of Israel, he attempts to bully his critics into silence by falsely accusing them of inciting violence.

Some might say Murray is guilty of hypocritical double-talk, but I think that would be wrong. He could perhaps more accurately be accused of double-think. Murray is so arrogant, so convinced of the incontrovertibility of his own views and the intellectual inferiority of his opponents, so lacking in any capacity for self-criticism, that he genuinely fails to comprehend the contradictions and incoherence of his arguments.

Britain First continues campaign of harassment

Britain First at Crayford mosque August 2014
Britain First chairman Paul Golding and his gang at the Crayford mosque on Friday

A week ago the far-right anti-Muslim group Britain First suffered a major blow when its founder and financier Jim Dowson resigned from the organisation, in part because of his opposition to the notorious “mosque invasions” led by Britain First chairman Paul Golding.

Dowson said that while it was necessary to oppose extremists he objected to “decent Muslims” being intimidated in this way. In a video statement responding to Dowson’s departure, a shaken Golding announced that Britain First had suspended its mosque invasion campaign and would be moving on to other forms of street protest.

It turns out that not much has changed. While actual “invasions” have been renounced, at least temporarily, Britain First is still intent on targeting ordinary Muslims, whose faith it holds to be a threat to the British, Christian way of life.

On Friday, Golding and his gang turned up outside the North West Kent Muslim Association mosque in Crayford. This is the same mosque they barged into last month, harassing the imam and threatening to remove the “sexist” signs outside the building that indicated separate entrances for women and men. This time they didn’t try to enter the mosque but knocked on the door and harangued the people who answered, while handing out copies of Britain First’s Islam and Women pamphlet to worshippers and passers-by. (“Most folk know that Islam exists”, the pamphlet begins, “but have no clue as to its true horror.”)

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Mirror stokes up Islamophobia with bogus anti-Muslim story

Boycott star city racist shithole Facebook page

Last week the arrival of Eid provided the pretext for yet another round of anti-Muslim scaremongering. According to a rumour that quickly spread across the internet, the Vue cinema in Birmingham’s Star City entertainment complex was only allowing Muslims who were celebrating Eid to enter the venue and had turned away non-Muslims.

This transparently ludicrous story would appear to have been kicked off by a comment posted on the Birmingham Mail Facebook page by one Emma Noakes, who accused Birmingham City Council of colluding with Vue in implementing a discriminatory admission policy:

Emma Noakes Facebook comment

You’ll note that Ms Noakes’ accusation wasn’t based on her own experience of being turned away from the cinema but on a second-hand and probably garbled account by a friend. As for her suggestion that the local authority was co-operating with Star City in banning non-Muslims from the venue, this was clearly nonsense.

Nevertheless, it was enough to provoke a predictable spate of outraged comments denouncing the supposed ban as further proof of an Islamic takeover of Britain and the subjugation of the indigenous people. A Facebook page was set up to rally opposition to the discrimination against non-Muslims, under the title “Boycott star city – racist shithole”. The accusation of racism was particularly ironic, given that the page is clearly a far-right initiative, as the photos below demonstrate.

Unsurprisingly, Birmingham City Council denied any involvement, telling those who inquired about the issue: “This has nothing to do with the council and is simply not true.” The Birmingham Mail, a newspaper not averse to engaging in a bit of anti-Muslim scaremongering itself, also dismissed the rumour as baseless, stating: “We have fully investigated these allegations and can find no foundation for them.”

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UKIP councillor brands Jaloos ‘call to war’, links to Facebook page proposing ‘cull’ of Muslims

Rod Butler and Nigel FarageA UKIP councillor has been accused of “scaring people with made-up information” after he branded an Islamic procession in Ilford “a call to war”.

The parade was actually Jaloos, an annual Muslim event to commemorate the martyrdom of the first Shia Imam, Imam Ali. Jaloos is celebrated across the world with similar processions.

Epping Forest councillor Rod Butler, from the UK Independence Party, tweeted a link to a video of the Jaloos and said: “Nice Islamic call to war in Ilford Essex today. Police didn’t bother to intervene, they didn’t understand language.”

Cllr Rod Butler didn’t understand the language either, because according to local Muslim activist Ale Natiq, the ‘call to war’ he heard were actually Panjabi and Urdu hymns recalling the of the holy Imam to “rekindle the spirit of standing up to injustice and rejecting tyranny” – the opposite of a ‘call to war’.

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Torygraph discovers ‘jihad on dogs’

Under the headline “Commonwealth Games Scottie dogs ‘disrespectful to Muslims’”, the Telegraph reports that the use of Scottish terrier dogs to lead teams around Celtic Park in the opening ceremony of the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow last Wednesday has been criticised by “Malaysian politicians and religious leaders”. (In the Daily Mail‘s version of the story, the critics are elevated to “Malaysian officials”.)

The criticisms quoted were in fact raised by two individuals – one the leader of a minor political party and the other of an extremist movement – and it looks like their objections were not so much to the use of dogs as such but rather to reports that the dog supposed to be leading the Malaysian team refused to move and had to be carried by a team representative.

The Telegraph article helpfully explains: “Many Muslims refuse to have direct contact with dogs, which are considered by some to be ‘unclean’ in Islamic culture. Some overseas Muslim groups have reportedly previously called for a jihad on dogs.”

The article concludes: “A Glasgow 2014 spokesman said: ‘Glasgow 2014 have received no complaints from the Commonwealth Games Associations of the competing nations and territories following the Opening Ceremony’.”

So, another anti-Muslim story concocted out of nothing.

For the background to the “jihad on dogs” nonsense, see here and here.

Crisis in Britain First – Dowson quits, Golding calls off mosque invasions

JimBritain First Thank You James Dowson, the brains (and money) behind the far-right Britain First group, has resigned from the organisation and indeed from political life generally.

In a rambling resignation letter posted on the Britain First website, Dowson announces “my retirement from all political activities forthwith and my withdrawal from Britain First with immediate effect”, a decision that he attributes to “recent political and personal events and family health issues”.

In an accompanying statement, Britain First asserts that the state “persecution” Dowson has suffered in Northern Ireland has been exacerbated by a media campaign instigated by Hope Not Hate (described, bizarrely, as “the biggest far-Left group in the country”) that has sought to “portray James as the ‘evil genius’ behind the ‘far right’ in Britain”.

But another of Dowson’s motivations for leaving the organisation would appear to be his disapproval of the “mosque invasions” that Britain First has been carrying out over the past few months:

“The media have put him under enormous pressure recently regarding our invasions of mosques across Britain and understandably this has forced Jim to distance himself from these activities, notwithstanding the fact that these mosque invasions have cause considerable exposure of issues such as Muslim female genital mutilation, second class treatment of women, extremism and grooming gangs.”

Even Dowson, it seems, is embarrassed to be associated with a gang of thugs who think it’s brave to barge into places of worship and harass elderly Muslims.

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Britain First ‘roadshow’ not going well

Coventry protest against Britain First

In between “invading” mosques and harassing elderly Muslims, the far-right group Britain First have been holding a nationwide “roadshow” aimed at boosting recruitment to their tiny organisation. So far they have held half a dozen meetings across England and Scotland (a seventh, in Bristol, was cancelled), with one yet to come in Belfast.

On Friday the fascists turned up in Coventry, where they were confronted by an impressive 150-strong protest (see photo). Inside the meeting, the numbers were rather smaller. It would seem that buying Facebook likes and generating publicity by threatening mosques doesn’t translate into any great popular enthusiasm for joining one of Britain First’s “battalions”.

Even fewer supporters appear to have turned out for the Swanley leg of the roadshow on Saturday. Not only that, but according to Britain First’s account, while the meeting was under way the police had a word with the manager of the venue, who promptly cancelled the booking and gave them 10 minutes to vacate the premises.