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Archive for July, 2006

Monitor the Mosques

Monday, July 10th, 2006

By Ben Shapiro
www.townhall.com

Canadian law enforcement in Toronto recently arrested seventeen Muslim men for planning terrorist attacks on Canadian targets. The leader of the group, Qayyum Abdul Jamal, 43, recruited young Muslim males by speaking at Al-Rahman Islamic Center for Islamic Education, a storefront mosque in Mississauga. Law enforcement officials across the globe are searching for suspects connected to the Toronto seventeen; American law enforcement has already discovered at least two terrorism suspects who spoke with members of the Canadian terrorist cell.

In May 2004, London authorities arrested hook-handed, one-eyed imam Abu Hamza al-Masri. The United States immediately filed charges against al-Masri and asked that Britain expedite him for trial. Among other terrorist acts, the indictment charged al-Masri with attempting to set up a terrorist cell in Oregon. Al-Masri was also linked to terrorists Zacarias Moussaoui, who was involved in the Sept. 11 plot, and Richard Reid, the shoe bomber. Al-Masri was the imam of the Finsbury Park Mosque in London, where he used his pulpit to recruit terrorists and preach hate.

In September 2002, American law enforcement arrested six members of a larger terrorist cell in Buffalo, New York. All six were young Muslim men, and all six had attended terrorist training in Afghanistan. The leader of the group, Kamal Derwish, had recruited all six arrested members by speaking at his local mosque in Lackawanna. All six men pled guilty to terrorism charges.

Mohammed Atta, one of the Sept. 11 hijackers, used a mosque in Hamburg, Germany to network with potential recruits, including Ramzi Binalshibh, who would act as a coordinator for the attacks. Two of the potential Sept. 11 terrorists, Nawaf al-Hazmi and Khalid al-Mihdhar, hooked up with an imam at Rabat Mosque, Anwar Aulaqi; Aulaqi would later aid al-Hazmi and Mihdhar’s replacement, Hani Hanjour, in relocating east as Sept. 11 approached.

Mosques across the globe have provided material aid to terrorist groups ranging from al-Qaeda to Islamic Jihad to Hezbollah to Hamas. Muslim terrorists use mosques as networking sites and often as recruitment centers for future terrorist comrades. There is no doubt that law enforcement should be heavily scrutinizing the membership and administration of mosques. Doing so before Sept. 11 could have prevented that catastrophe, just as scrutiny of a small, seemingly insignificant storefront mosque may have prevented major terrorist attacks in Canada. Muslim terrorists are, above all, religious. They will attend mosques, even if only to pray. Forget racial profiling—monitoring mosques is simple common sense.

Leaders in the Muslim community don’t seem to get it. “People are suspicious and there’s anger,” complains Aly Hindy, imam at the Toronto-based Salaheddin Islamic Center in Scarborough. “We are being targeted not because of what we’ve done but because of who we are and what we believe in.”

Prevention is undoubtedly the only option if civilized nations wish to preserve their citizenries from the sadistic barbarism of our enemies. Monitoring mosques is the simplest and most effective way of preventing terrorist attacks. Many imams are trustworthy; many mosques are clean. Nonetheless, law enforcement must pursue a strategy of “trust, but verify.” Lives depend on it.

Inconvenient Truth About Global Warming

Tuesday, July 4th, 2006

Wesley Pruden
Washington Times

Repent Now! The end is at hand!

A panel of eminent scientists testified recently at a congressional hearing on global warming, showing up just short of wearing sandwich boards splashed with warnings of the wrath to come.

They presented a report by the National Academy of Sciences, 155 pages of hysteria and hyperbole, suggesting that the Earth is running a fever and “human activities are responsible for much of the recent warming.”

The worthies confided that Earth hasn’t been this hot in 400 years, and maybe longer, but gave no hint that they understood how they had undermined their practiced hysteria. If the Earth was this hot 400 years ago, or even 4,000 years ago, then the recent warming could not have been caused by the madness of man’s machines, the flatulence of cows, or even hot air from professors hot to get their names in the paper.

Their presentation was studded with “likely,” “maybe,” “could be,” and “very close to being right,” with assurances that their findings were gleaned from tree rings, coral, glaciers, cave deposits (from bulls?), ocean and lake sediments, bore holes and ice cores.

The investigation was commissioned in November by Rep. Sherwood Boehlert, a Republican from upstate New York, to answer growing skepticism from scientists who think hysteria is not an effective substitute for reasoned analysis. The timing of the hearings, just when Al Gore’s fading horror movie about global warming needs a little mojo at the box office, is no doubt mere coincidence.

Recycling and regurgitation was yesterday’s order of the day. The panel looked at how other scientists reconstructed temperatures over hundreds and thousands of years. Some of it was educated guessing, since there were few scientific instruments back in that day, and a lot of it was to be taken on faith. Scientists are generally not very hot on faith, but they embrace the global-warming doctrine with the enthusiasm of a backwoods snake handler in the Tennessee mountains. The panelists said the warming over the past 50 years was something no one had seen in a millennium, but conceded that well, umm, OK, it is true that the Earth suffered a “Little Ice Age” for about 350 years after 1500. But hey, who’s counting?

Between the year A.D. 1 and the year 1850, volcanos and fluctuations in the heat from the sun were responsible for temperature changes, but these changes were much less pronounced than the warming caused by man-made pollution in the years since the mid-19th century.

This gets to the point of the hysteria. Scientific Man in all his manufactured glory can’t bear the thought that he might not, after all, be as powerful as a volcano or a solar flare. How many learned degrees does a volcano have, after all? The idea that forces of the universe greater even than Scientific Man may be responsible for the cyclical changes is unbearable.

Hence “global warming” has become the religion — the opiate, you might say — of Scientific Man, a doctrine supported by quackery, supposition and speculation, and as closely held and as ferociously defended as the Virgin Birth and the Resurrection at a gathering of devout Christians. You could ask the Rt. Rev. Al Gore, the presiding archbishop of the First Church of the Boiling Globe.

The bishops and monsignors of the church treat dissent harshly, though not yet at the stake. Richard Lindzen, the Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, writes in the Wall Street Journal of the fate of academic dissenters to orthodox doctrine. “[T]here is a sinister side to this feeding frenzy. Scientists who dissent from the alarmism have seen their grant funds disappear, their work derided, and themselves libeled as industry stooges, scientific hacks or worse. Consequently, lies about climate change gain credence even when they fly in the face of the science that supposedly is their basis.”

He recalls how Mr. Gore, as a senator in 1992, tried to bullyrag dissenting scientists. Indeed, it was about this time that Mr. Gore, at a luncheon interview with editors and reporters at The Washington Times, suggested that we join the fun, too, and even if we printed stuff that wasn’t exactly true it would be OK because the cause was just.

This is Mr. Gore’s “inconvenient truth.”

“Time to Talk to Reach Long-lasting Peace”

Tuesday, July 4th, 2006

By Herb Keinon
Jerusalem Post

Kassam rocket fire on Sderot is another sign that the Israelis and Palestinians need to “sit down and talk and go for a long-lasting peace,” European External Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner has told The Jerusalem Post.

Responding to the oft-heard argument that any European country faced with a constant rocket barrage on one of its cities would respond with great military force, Ferrero-Waldner said that “at a certain moment everyone would understand that one has to sit down and talk and go for long lasting peace; this is the only argument that really counts.” She said that if this were not done, “it would be horrible here and horrible there, and this is our European understanding. We would like to assist both of you as much as we can and be an objective partner.”

When asked with whom Israel should sit and talk, she said, “absolutely with [Palestinian Authority] President Mahmoud Abbas.” Ferrero-Waldner, who left Israel after two days of talks focused on the Quartet-backed “funding mechanism” designed to channel international aid into the PA while bypassing the Hamas-led government, met Abbas and said he is “the elected president and also a man of peace. He has renounced violence, recognized Israel, and always speaks about the roadmap and about Oslo, and he wants to talk with Israel. I think this is the right moment to do it.”

Regarding whether she feels Abbas was now in a position to implement anything agreed upon in negotiations, she responded, “I think he can, and you have to give him the chance to show that.” Ferrero-Waldner praised Abbas for his referendum idea on the so-called prisoners’ document that calls for the establishment of a Palestinian state along the pre-1967 lines, with Jerusalem as its capital, and a “return of refugees” to their homes.

She said that although the EU doesn’t agree with all eighteen points of the document, “it is a step forward.” She made clear, however, that even were Hamas to accept this document, it would not mean that they had accepted the international community’s benchmarks for legitimacy: recognizing Israel, renouncing violence, and accepting previous agreements with Israel.

She said that a Palestinian referendum on this issue, or acceptance of the document by Hamas, could lead to a new government in the PA that could then live up to the international benchmarks for acceptance. She said it was too early to say whether the EU would fund such a referendum.

Ferrero-Waldner reiterated that she viewed Prime Minster Ehud Olmert’s realignment plan as “a bold and courageous step because it entailed removing settlers,” but also added that a long lasting peace could only be reached through a negotiated settlement.

Asked whether she thought disengagement from Gaza was a wise move considering that now Hamas is in power, Gaza is on the verge of chaos, and there are concerns of a major military escalation because of the constant pounding of Sderot, Ferrero-Waldner replied, “If you ask your own people to withdraw from settlements and settle elsewhere this is brave, I must say. Now I think what you have to do is make peace out of it, and I think [former Quartet disengagement envoy] Jim Wolfensohn did a very good job, but many of these things are not yet implemented. Look at the Gaza-West Bank for instance. There are quite a number of things that need to be done.”


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