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Islamophobia Still Rising in the US With
the Right's Help
By Steve Rendall
Fair.org, March 12, 2012
The mainstreaming of anti-Muslim conspiracy theories
When the Center for American Progress (CAP) released the report Fear,
Inc. in September (8/26/11),
alleging that U.S. anti-Muslim propaganda is largely driven by a well-funded
network of groups and individuals, confirmation of its claims came quickly.
Just four days after publication, the Fox Business Network aired a wildly
inaccurate two-part feature on Follow the Money (8/30/11) smearing the
report, its authors and Muslim Americans. Rupert Murdoch–owned media outlets
like FBN are among the country’s leading Islamophobic media organizations,
according to Fear, Inc.
The first segment featured self-styled
terrorism expert Steven Emerson of the Investigative Project on
Terrorism—named by CAP as one of the anti-Muslim network’s five key
formulators of propaganda, or “misinformation experts”—telling FBN host Eric
Bolling that “most of the Islamic organizations in the United States...are
run by the Muslim Brotherhood or created in the Muslim Brotherhood, a group
that believes in imposing Islam and Sharia around the world.” The suggestion
that the Muslim Brotherhood, whose connections to U.S. Muslim groups range
from historical to tenuous to nonexistent, is secretly connecting and
controlling “most of the Islamic organizations in the United States” is a
classic conspiratorial trope.
Emerson also told Bolling that Fear,
Inc., “reminds me of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,” referring to the
historic hoax alleging Jews were plotting world domination—missing the irony
that the report debunks conspiracy theories about Muslims that bear a
remarkable resemblance to classic anti-Semitism.
But the suggestion
that Fear, Inc. was itself anti-Semitic was key to Fox’s attack. In the next
segment, Bolling gave what he presented as a quotation from the report:
I need to point this out—I’m reading directly from this report: “The
Obama-allied Center for American Progress has released a report that blames
Islamophobia in America on a small group of Jews and Israel supporters in
America, whose views are being backed by millions of dollars.”
As
should have been obvious, the quote was not from Fear, Inc., but rather from
an article smearing CAP, from the far-right American Thinker website
(8/27/11). That didn’t stop the rest of the segment—Bolling’s questions and
his guests’ answers—from focusing on CAP’s supposed anti-Semitic
conspiracy-theorizing. “For the Center of American Progress to say there is
a grand conspiracy undermines their credibility and is laughable,” said
lobbyist David Rehr, who likened CAP to a “left John Birch Society” (not to
be confused with the regular John Birch Society--the ultra-right,
conspiracy-mongering group prominently featured on Glenn Beck’s now defunct
Fox News show).
Though Bolling later corrected his misattribution
(9/2/11), it was a good night for Muslim-bashing: There were no corrections
issued for the the oft-repeated charges that Muslim American institutions
are extremist or that Islamic law threatens the U.S.
Islamophobia
is on the rise in the United States. Yearly polls taken by ABC News show a
10-point increase in unfavorable views of Muslims since 2001, and a doubling
of those who say Islam “encourages violence” since 2002. As the horrors of
the September 11 attacks recede into history, anti-Muslim sentiment
continues to increase.
Meanwhile, American Muslims and their
institutions are under assault from many official quarters. The FBI has been
accused by the American Civil Liberties Union of “industrial scale” ethnic
and religious profiling (Christian Science Monitor,
10/21/11). The New York City police department has reportedly partnered
with the CIA in a massive spying campaign, ethnically profiling mosques and
Muslims in cities far from New York (AP, 8/25/11), and Rep. Peter King
(R-N.Y.) has held three congressional hearings on terrorism focusing solely
on American Muslims, despite the fact that a tiny percent of “homegrown”
terrorist acts involve Muslim suspects—three of 83 between 9/11 and the end
of 2009, according to a recent RAND report (Extra!,
5/11).
Anti-Muslim bigotry has been around in the U.S. for decades, but why the
rise now? In addition to Fear, Inc., several recent reports suggest at least
part of the answer resides in the emergence of a more highly organized
national Islamophobic propaganda network (Southern Poverty Law Center
Intelligence Report,
Summer/11; Political Research Associates, Manufacturing the Muslim
Menace,
2011; People for the American Way, The Right-Wing Playbook on
Anti-Muslim Extremism,
2011; UC Berkeley’s Center for Race & Gender/Council on American-Islamic
Relations, Same Hate, New Target,
2011). FAIR’s 2008 report, Smearcasting: How Islamophobes Spread Fear,
Bigotry and Misinformation (10/8/08),
documented the prevalence of Islamophobia in right-wing and centrist U.S.
corporate media.
“A small group of conservative foundations and
wealthy donors are the lifeblood of the Islamophobia network in America,”
reports Fear, Inc., which identifies five key organizations and chief
spokespersons, or “misinformation experts”: Along with Emerson, they are
Frank Gaffney of the Center for Security Policy, David Yerushalmi of the
Society of Americans for National Existence, Daniel Pipes of Middle East
Forum and Robert Spencer of Jihad Watch.
These groups and their
representatives are the “central nervous system” of the network, supported
and amplified by friendly media assets, grassroots and Web-based groups, as
well as political figures at local and national levels. Together they fuel
Islamophobia in the U.S. through campaigns that attempt to demonize
Islamic-American institutions as extremist and portray Muslims as secretly
plotting to impose Islamic law on the U.S.
Popular expression of this
bigotry underpins campaigns against mosque construction (Extra!, 10/10) as
well as against the imagined threat of Islamic law, known as Shariah. Anti-Shariah
laws have passed in four states and are under consideration in more than 20
others (New York Times,
7/30/11; Forward, 7/22/11).
The main force behind these campaigns is Yerushalmi, an attorney who has
said Muslims “are our enemies” Anchorage class="media_outlet">Daily News4/1/11),
calls for “war against Islam and all Muslim faithful” (American Muslim,
10/28/09) and, according to Mother Jones
(3/1/11), has “tried to criminalize adherence to the Muslim faith.” (Not
limiting his bigotry to Islamophobia, Yerushalmi has referred to blacks as
“the most murderous of peoples,” called unauthorized immigrants “undeserving
of rights” and applauded the decision of America’s founders to deny women
and blacks the right to vote—McAdam Report,
5/12/06.)
According to a New York Times profile (7/30/11),
Yerushalmi writes reports, files lawsuits and drafts model legislation, “all
with the effect of casting Shariah as one of the greatest threats to
American freedom since the cold war.”
While the First Amendment
prevents U.S. law from being based on any religious tradition, Shariah does
occasionally emerge in U.S. domestic law proceedings, typically when a will
specifies that an estate is to be divided in accordance with Muslim
tradition (just as a will may stipulate dispositions in accordance with
other religious traditions). Putting today’s anti-Shariah campaign in
historical context, Eliyahu Stern, a professor of religious studies and
history at Yale wrote in a New York Times op-ed (9/2/11),
“The suggestion that Shariah threatens American security is disturbingly
reminiscent of the accusation, in 19th-century Europe, that Jewish religious
law was seditious.”
The anti-Muslim network’s echo chamber was
demonstrated in June, by the publication of “Shariah and Violence in
American Mosques” in the Middle East Quarterly (Summer/11), the journal of
Islamophobe Daniel Pipes. The study, coauthored by Yerushalmi, portrayed
American mosques as teachers of violence and Islamic supremacy. As Spencer
reported on the study for his site Jihad Watch
(6/7/11),
51 percent of mosques had texts that either advocated
the use of violence in the pursuit of a Shariah-based political order or
advocated violent jihad as a duty that should be of paramount importance to
a Muslim; 30 percent had only texts that were moderately supportive of
violence like the Tafsir Ibn Kathir and Fiqh as-Sunna; 19 percent had no
violent texts at all.
The study also stated that in 85 percent of
American mosques, the imam recommended studying “violence-positive texts,” a
vague charge that prompted SPLC’s Robert Steinback to ask (Intelligence
Report, (6/13/11),
“If a priest or rabbi had a Bible on hand and ‘recommended’ the reading of
the Book of Leviticus, would that establish that he favors killing
adulterers, idolaters and incorrigible children?”
Spencer’s piece
ran in Human Events
(6/14/11), and
Jihad Watch’s sister publication FrontPageMag.com (6/10/11) ran an interview
with Yerushalmi on the study. Fox & Friends (6/13/11) hosted a discussion of
it with the Center for Security Policy’s Gaffney, who thanked the hosts for
taking on this “mortal threat.” In a Washington Times column (6/7/11),
Gaffney said the study “describes an ominous jihadist footprint being put
into place across the nation,” adding, “most mosques in the United States
are actually engaged in—or at least supportive of—a totalitarian, seditious
agenda they call Shariah.”
The study was reported in many other
Islamophobic outlets, including National Review Online (
6/7/11), Atlas Shrugs (6/7/11)
and Gates of Vienna (6/3/11).
The claim that more than 80 percent of mosques teach violence and
Islamic supremacy, and another dramatic but unsupported figure from years
earlier alleging that 80 percent of American mosques are run by radical
imams, are regularly parroted by national media figures and politicians.
Appearing on Laura Ingraham’s nationally syndicated radio show (1/13/11)
in advance of his hearings on domestic terrorism, Rep. King repeated a
number of Islamophobic smears, calling Muslims “an enemy living among us.”
According to the Center for American Progress blog Think Progress (1/25/11),
when King was asked by substitute host Raymond Arroyo how many mosques he
thought were “infected” by “radical jihad sentiment,” King said that “over
80 percent of mosques in this country are controlled by radical Imams.”
Actually, a 2004 study of Detroit-area mosques by the Institute for
Social Policy and Understanding found that “the vast majority of
American-Muslims eschew extremist views.” A joint study of Muslims and
mosques carried out by scholars at the University of North Carolina and
Duke, Anti-Terror Lessons of Muslim-Americans (1/6/10),
found that American mosques encourage political participation and reduce
social alienation and thus “contemporary mosques are actually a deterrent to
the spread of militant Islam and terrorism,” as a New York Times (8/7/10)
summary of the study put it.
“Rarely has the United States seen a
more reckless and bare-knuckled campaign,” wrote the SPLC’s Steinback wrote
(Intelligence Report,
Summer/11), “to vilify a distinct class of people and compromise their
fundamental civil and human rights than the recent rhetoric against
Muslims.” As noted, the New York Times, among other outlets, has done
occasional reports debunking anti-Muslim smears. But such a large-scale
campaign of hatred and scapegoating requires a forceful and sustained effort
by journalists to challenge and refute the bigotry.
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=4499
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