September 12: Why Homeland Security Begins with Equality And Liberty
September 11, 2009
by Jeffrey Imm
Responsible for Equality And
Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
http://www.realcourage.org/2009/09/security-begins-with-equality-and-liberty/
http://www.unitedstatesaction.com/blog/imm-articles/143.html
Every year, as we remember the tragedy and loss of the 9/11 attacks, we
see more and more people who seek to push this grim chapter in America's
history from our minds. They seek to focus our attention on anything
else other than the vicious act of war that brutalized our nation, and
that has terrorized our nation these many years. But the greatest
tragedy is the failure of America's governmental representatives and we
as a people to effectively respond to this act of war. While we take
comfort in the brief moment of unity that our brave police and
firefighters had on 9/11, that unity was quickly lost on September 12,
when we had to decide how we would respond.
Our failure to have unity in our response to the 9/11 act of war has
continued to embolden those whose ideology of hate inspired the 9/11
attackers. Our failure to acknowledge, define, and challenge this
ideology of hate continues to be the greatest tragedy of the 9/11
attacks as many thousands more continue to die, while our leaders, our
media, and yes most of our people, refuse to acknowledge the ideology of
hate behind both the 9/11 attacks and so many
terrorist attacks against women,
against
religious
minorities,
against
gays, and
against those
supporting
free thought and
human rights today.
Our group, Responsible for
Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.), has identified this ideology of
institutionalized hate. As Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. once had to
challenge an identity group to change by pointing to an
ideology of "supremacy,"
so today we too must do the same.
Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr. challenged such "white supremacy" because America needed an
honest dialogue on the ideology of identity-based supremacy that was
rampant throughout our nation, and that was indefensible as a "culture"
among a people responsible for our
universal
human rights of equality and liberty. His choice to defy such
"white supremacy" was
not based on hatred of white Americans, but was based on his
commitment to our consistency in universal human rights for all
people -
truths that we hold self-evident. Such commitment to universal
human rights is always a mission of love and mercy. We recognize
that those impacted by the hate of supremacy even includes
those of that identity group, as white supremacists still continue
to
attack and murder other white Americans even today.
Today we also challenge those who would support an ideology of
"Islamic supremacism" -- in all of its forms, sects, and
permutations. While we recognize that this very term challenges
many, we also point out that - like the term "white supremacism" - that
is the point. The challenge is to recognize the hate
of supremacism as demonstrating the need for such people to change.
As we did not defend the "culture" of white supremacism to deny our
universal human rights, so we must also not defend the "culture" of
Islamic supremacists to deny our universal human rights - even to other
Muslims. Our respect for other cultures does not extend to a
culture of hate or to a culture of supremacism. As we have defied
Nazism, as we have defied racial supremacism, and as we have defied
Communist totalitarianism, as "cultures" that reject our universal human
rights of equality and liberty - so we too have an obligation to reject
a "culture" of Islamic supremacism, if we are to be
responsible for equality and
liberty. Our
universal
human rights are the most "omnicultural" and fundamental basis to
grow as a human society. They are not negotiable, and they are not
for sale. They are the basis for shared respect, dignity, and
peace between all cultures of humanity.
This is the primary lesson that we needed to learn from the 9/11 attacks
and that needed to be a fundamental part of America's governmental
response since September 12, 2001. Yet we continue to wait for an
acknowledgment, a definition, and a challenge to Islamic supremacism
from America's government that remains focuses only the tactics of who,
what, where, and when -- and still today is devastatingly silent about
the issue of "why." As
American leaders have consistently refused to address this ideological
challenge, and as
growing numbers of American children no longer even remember the 9/11
attacks, let alone understand "why," the global threat of Islamic
supremacism in all of its tactics, including terrorism, continues to
grow.
Islamic supremacist terrorism did not end with the 9/11 attacks. Nor did
our military and homeland security tactics end such attacks. By focusing
only on tactics, and refusing to acknowledge the ideology behind the
9/11 attacks and recognizing the need to create a strategy to confront
that ideology, the only change was to move such terrorism to other, more
vulnerable individuals around the world.
"Better them than us" is not a strategy for any type of meaningful
security. As we have learned since 9/11, a continuing approach to denial
and appeasement on the ideology of Islamic supremacism has only meant
that such supremacists have already terrorized us enough to keep us from
consistently defending universal human rights - the strongest argument
we have against such an anti-freedom ideology.
Our national surrender by refusing to acknowledge and challenge the
Islamic supremacist ideology with our universal human rights -- has not
made America's homeland "safe," but has only convinced Islamic supremacists
that we don't really have the courage of our convictions. With such
surrender, the tactics of infiltration have been a much more practical
tactic for Islamic supremacists, since many Americans have already been
terrorized into silence.
But America and Americans are better than this. We are a
nation whose very identity embodies the
universal
human rights of equality and liberty as
truths that we hold
self-evident. We can reach beyond fear and we can rise above hate.
Americans can choose to honestly answer the question "why" the 9/11
attacks happened, and Americans can choose to overcome the lethargic
policies of "more of the same" denial and appeasement on Islamic
supremacism.
We can choose a different path to set an example to the world as
consistent defenders of our universal human rights. American can choose
to set a course for real security by being
responsible for equality and
liberty.
1. Why September 12 Matters
Across America on September 11, many will remember and mourn for those
lost in the terrorist attacks on America on September 11, 2001. That day
is a day for national remembrance and mourning. It is a day for national
solidarity with the families of those who died. But we must also be
aware of and debate our response to the September 11 attacks on
September 12. It is what American governmental leaders have done and not
done in response to the 9/11 attacks that continues to define our
position on this issue still today.
Almost all of the discussion of American governmental leaders' response
on September 12 has been on tactical issues - tactics for improving
homeland security, tactics for addressing military issues, tactics on
funding for such operations, and tactics for relations with other
nations.
But what continues to get lost in these discussions on tactics is an
honest and serious assessment of where America stands on the ideas that
were and that continue to be attacked. The September 11 attacks were not
only on four airplanes, the World Trade Center towers, and the Pentagon,
killing over 3,000. The September 11 attacks were not only the acts of
terrorists.
The September 11 attacks were also acts of war by those whose
institutionalized hate ideology of Islamic supremacism demanded
rejection of America's ideas of human equality, its ideas of human
liberty, and its conviction that these are universal truths that we hold
self-evident not just for Americans, but for all people around the
world. The September 11 attacks were by a group whose ideology of
institutionalized hate defies the very idea of such universal human
rights. That is the starting point of understanding the September 11
attacks, and it should have been the starting point for American
governmental leaders' response on September 12.
But for all of these eight years, this most basic starting point in a
response to the September 11 attacks has been ignored by our
governmental leaders, and continues to be ignored today.
2. The Most Important Question to America on 9/11 - Why
The most important question on the 9/11 attacks continues to get the
least attention. Instead, our preoccupation has been solely with
concrete barriers, with military operations, with terrorist trials, and
with who, what, where, and when.
But the most important question - "Why" - continues to be swept away as
not relevant to a "practical" march for
"homeland security" tactics, for
"war on terror" tactics, and even for
foreign policy
"reconciliation"
talks. "Why" remains an inconvenient question for politicians whose
business is based on compromise and for
relativist policy wonks and
tactical professionals who simply want "something done," without raising
questions that require tough choices.
"Why" is
too onerous a question for the craven who willingly sacrifice
our brave young men and women in the armed forces without identifying
the enemy, let alone developing a strategy to address the enemy's
ideology. "Why" is too tough for much of the mainstream media to cope
with, so they have allowed an endless stream of reporting on "isolated
incidents" that a sea of volunteer bloggers have had to track and link
over the years for any type of meaningful analysis.
"Why" is considered an "ideological" distraction by those who are
deliberately blind to the Islamic supremacist ideology of
institutionalized hate that the September 11 attackers, and so many more
after them around the world, have clearly and unequivocally
communicated.
"Why" is a question that many believe is bad for business, it aggravates
"foreign relations," it worries those solely concerned about
international trade, and it infuriates those who seek
"reconciliation"
talks with the Taliban and those with similar Islamic supremacist
ideologies.
Those who seek to silence the necessary discussion on why -- do not
understand that America is based on asking the question "why." It is the
most fundamental question inherent to America's existence. Our identity,
our choices, our very creation as a nation is more than simply a
rebellion over unfair taxation - it is more than a concern about
capitalist trading - it is more than our concerns in dealing with other
nations - and it is certainly more than simply being "safe." From the
beginning America is a nation that DARED to ask the most basic question
of "why" human beings did not deserve the inalienable rights of
equality, liberty, and freedom. We are the land of the free and the home
of the brave - because we dared to ask WHY.
The most un-American response possible to the 9/11 attacks would be to
fear to ask "why." But thus far, the "September 12" response has been to
hide behind a concrete barrier, send our children to fight wars for
enemies we fear to identify, and stubbornly refuse to ask the question
"why." We have been repeatedly told by our governmental leaders that we
need to adopt a "September 12 mentality" about such things and recognize
that we need to support their tactics without question or debate.
But what we have seen over the past eight years is that a "September 12
Mentality" that fails to identify the threat of institutionalized hate
and Islamic supremacism is a mentality of self-delusion and
self-deception. We have allowed our government to do "whatever it takes"
to fight terrorist threats except to actually define and address the
ideological threat that is the answer to the September 12 question of
"why."
Too many in our nation have refused to recognize that the most important
part of a "September 12 Mentality" should have been and should still be
today to be responsible for equality and liberty as a priority in our
national and international decisions. It is this failure that has led to
the continuing dysfunctional "September 12" tactics that address an
enemy we fear to define.
3. More of the Same Short-Sightedness and the War on Extremism
I keep an
article posted by my desk to look at every day by Steven
Emerson of the Investigative Project on Terrorism. In the article, Mr.
Emerson condemns how "the president aligns with those who think the West
is responsible for Islamic terrorism." In the sub-heading of the
article, it states that that the president "coddles American apologists
for radical Islam."
The
June 28, 2007 National Review article is about President Bush
(not President Obama), and
his decision to appoint an envoy to the Islamic supremacist
international organization, the Organization of Islamic Conference
(OIC). Over two years ago, President Bush appointed a U.S. envoy to the
same OIC that explained away the 9/11 attacks as the expression of "the
frustration, disappointment, and disillusion that are festering deep in
the Muslims' soul towards the aggressions and discrimination committed
by the West."
I keep the
article up on my wall to remember that our challenge in 2009
is not with "change," but really with "more of the same."
The failure to ask the question "why" has done more than move America
towards an endless "war on extremism" (W.O.E.) against undefined
"extremists;" it has created a bi-partisan, multi-administration
position regarding Islamic supremacism of "more of the same
short-sightedness" (M.O.S.S.). Is this the craven legacy we intend to
leave to the next generation?
Imagine us challenging white supremacism in the 1960s by sending a
federal government emissary to the "American White People's Party" that
explained the white supremacist terrorist bombing of black churches in
the American South as due to "frustration, disappointment, and
disillusion by whites regarding aggressions committed by blacks."
But that was the American government's position with Islamic supremacist
groups -- over two years ago.
It would be evident to anyone who understands "why" such terrorism
happens that such an appeasement of those who would rationalize
terrorist hate is nothing less than ideological surrender. But such
ideological surrender has become a bi-partisan, multi-administration
"more of the same" policy towards Islamic supremacism.
In
January 2008, the Civil Rights and Liberties division of the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
created a
memorandum to address
the need to create a new, non-offensive lexicon about terrorism. In that
memorandum, the Bush administration DHS
stated that "[t]he struggle is
for progress... The experts we consulted debated the word 'liberty,' but
rejected it because many around the world would discount the term as a
buzzword for American hegemony" (p. 7, paragraph 5).
Nearly two years
ago, our government was willing to surrender the defense of the very
idea of liberty for some type of "peace" with those who found that
keystone of humanity's universal human rights to be offensive. There
was no "March on Washington" about that, no buses, no convoys, and no
demonstrations in Washington DC. There were the
condemnations of a few
in Internet blogs, and
my challenge to America's governmental leaders at
a
June 2008 university meeting.
To my conservative friends, let me point out that January 2008 was a
YEAR before Barack Obama was inaugurated as president. There are those
whose partisan positions are that America started really going downhill
on this issue when Barack Obama was elected president.
While such arguments might comfort some partisan individuals, the facts
are more important.
Today's U.S. Defense Secretary Gates that has accepted the idea of
possible negotiations with Taliban is also the same U.S. Defense
Secretary Gates that
accepted this idea under the Bush administration in
October 2008. The blind tactics ignoring the ideological challenge that
"the enemy of my enemy is my friend" did not begin with the Obama
administration. The relativists in the
foreign policy,
military,
counterterrorism,
and other policy communities in Washington did not suddenly appear with
the election of Barack Obama. They have been here imbedded in these
communities for years. The legislators that supported a major
think-tank's
calls for negotiation with the Islamic supremacist Muslim
Brotherhood were from both the
Republican and
Democratic aisles.
Apologist think-tank reports on the Muslim Brotherhood were not
exclusively "left," but
also included the
American Enterprise
Institute's Reuel Marc Gerecht. American taxpayer dollars being used to
fund AIG's sharia finance business
started
with
the Bush administration.
I could go on for pages, but you get the point.
"More of the same short-sightedness" is a
bigger problem than
merely
challenging one political group, one administration, or one set of
supporters. If "more of the same" doesn't demonstrate anything else, it
certainly points out that what those of us opposed to Islamic
supremacism in the past have done has not been working, and that
we need
much more than an "anti-jihad" community and more than a
political-centric approach to challenging this anti-freedom ideology.
The painful fact is on the challenge of Islamic supremacism the one
thing we haven't seen in 2009 from American governmental leaders - is
CHANGE.
This bi-partisan problem demonstrates that
we need a new and different
approach to "more of the same."
4. The Consequences of "More of the Same"
"More of the Same" has resulted in American governmental leaders, most
of our news media, many human rights groups, and too many in the
American public ignoring the price of refusing to acknowledge the
institutionalized hate ideology of Islamic supremacism. The price of
surrendering in the war of ideas against those who promote such hate has
been paid by those who need our courage on this issue the most.
Those who believe that a policy of denial and appeasement on Islamic
supremacism has stopped "terrorism" fail to realize that "more of the
same" has really only sent a signal to Islamic supremacists that
"terrorism" will be tolerated against the weakest, most vulnerable parts
of human society.
This price is paid by helpless women around the world who are routinely
oppressed, mutilated, and killed by those who justify their actions
through Islamic supremacism. They rationalize so-called "honor killings"
of women, which the Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
human rights
group and other groups have
protested
against. Such
terrorism
against women has become a
standard feature of the "cultures" of some
nations, such as the prison-states of Saudi Arabia and Iran. But such
terrorism against women is not limited to just one or two countries, it
is nothing less than international terrorism against women around the
world, including Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, Saudi
Arabia, Iran, Egypt, Somalia, Africa, Asia, Russia, Europe, Canada, and
even the United States. Our surrender on the universal human rights of
equality and liberty by "more of the same" has sent a signal that
terrorism against women around the world by Islamic supremacists is
something that we will not challenge. In Turkey, where
President Obama
spoke in April 2009,
a quarter of the population supports supremacist
"honor killings" against women. This anti-human rights ideology was
never challenged. Our governmental leaderships' response to the ideology
that rationalizes terrorism and hate against
women has been a deafening
silence.
This price is also paid by the oppression and murder of religious
minorities around the world by Islamic supremacists -
against fellow
Muslims for not meeting supremacist standards, in
sectarian violence
against fellow Muslims who have different beliefs, and against
Christians,
Hindus,
Buddhists,
Jews, and others who are victimized for
having different religious beliefs. In Iraq, where Americans have
invested so many lives and so much funding, we hear of the continuing
supremacist violence on a regular basis between
Muslim groups of
different sects and a
regular targeting of Christians. In Afghanistan,
we have seen the
Afghanistan parliament itself call for the death of an
individual who chose freedom of conscience. In the prison-state nations
of
Saudi Arabia and
Iran, religious minorities are not tolerated, and
those who dare choose freedom of conscience are
imprisoned or worse. In
the Philippines,
120 thousand have died in a civil war by Islamic
supremacists who seek a separatist nation. In Thailand, Islamic
supremacists have been campaigning in their own separatist war targeting
Buddhists, Muslims who won't accept supremacism, elderly, women, school
teachers, and children's schools - with a
death toll since 2004 that is
over 3,300 - exceeding America's 9/11 death toll.
In Pakistan, a nation where
Al-Qaeda itself has found safe haven these
past eight years, we see the
oppression and
massacre of Christians and
other religious minorities by Islamic supremacists. While
churches are
being burned to the ground by
Islamic supremacist mobs of thousands in
Pakistan, White House advisors are
listening to counsel from Pakistani
leaders to negotiate with the Taliban. There is no outcry as Americans
continue
to provide
funds and support to a
Pakistani government who has
sought an international death penalty for "blasphemy," and whose own
"blasphemy" laws continue to be used to
terrorize and oppress
Christians, other religious minorities, and even
other
Muslims. In a
nation were religious minorities are often
told by Islamic supremacists
to "convert to Islam or die," there is no coherent national strategy on
how to deal with a largely Islamic supremacist nation with an
estimated
60 nuclear weapons. There was no national outrage as the
Pakistan
government released the leader of a black-market nuclear weapons network
who was deemed
by the CIA to be as great a threat as Osama Bin Laden.
There is no American governmental human rights denouncement of a nation
where
78 percent of its people support the death penalty for leaving
Islam,
83 percent support stoning of adulterers, and
75 percent seek the
Pakistani government to implement "strict Sharia law." Instead of
challenging Pakistani Islamic supremacists, American governmental
leaders meet
with them as a way to promote "democracy." When a
reported
20,000 Islamic supremacists in Pakistan march with hate to kill and
destroy Christians and burn down churches, American governmental leaders
are silent,
our taxpayer dollars continue to go to Pakistan, and only a
brave handful of individuals protest in
Washington DC and
New York. We
are told that we should be impressed when the
Pakistani police arrest
4
individuals from the mob of
thousands. There are no 20,000 Americans
marching on Washington DC to say "enough." Too many think this is
"someone else's problem," as
our nation writes another check to
Pakistan's leaders and looks the other way.
In Egypt where
President Obama spoke in June 2009, those Muslims who
speak out for freedom of conscience
are "excommunicated" and
threatened
by Islamic supremacists, and in Egypt,
Christian Copts
are
oppressed,
raped,
kidnapped, and
murdered. As we have seen in so many other
instances, our governmental leaderships' response to the ideology that
rationalizes terrorism and hate against those who seek freedom of
conscience has been muted at best. Around the world,
people fear to be
be free, as Islamic supremacist terrorists have been unchallenged
ideologically by those governmental leaders responsible for equality and
liberty.
Among the other vulnerable groups that
Islamic supremacists also attack
are gay human beings. They are a target throughout many countries,
especially Iraq, where they are the victims of a
campaign of "sexual
cleansing" through
kidnapping,
gruesome torture, and
murder. Such
Islamic supremacist campaigns of violence and oppression against gays continue
throughout the world including Europe, and are now
spreading to the United States in areas like Minneapolis. Even on
July
4, in our nation's capital,
the unindicted co-conspirator group
ISNA has
held conferences promoting hate speech against such gays and minorities
-- the same ISNA organization
whose leader is invited to the White House. Once
again, a deaf ear is turned to victims of such supremacist thinking by
our governmental leaders and the patterns are lost in the reporting by a
press that refuses to see such terrorism against humanity as nothing
more than "isolated incidents."
When Americans rightfully mourn our losses of 3,000 on 9/11, we must
also ask ourselves how many thousands have died around the world,
because of a national silence on Islamic supremacism? How many losses of
lives equivalent to the 9/11 attacks could we have prevented with a
response based on real courage on September 12?
How many marches on Washington DC have we seen for the thousands of
women murdered, and many more oppressed by Islamic supremacists? How
many marches on Washington DC have we seen for the attacks and murders
on Christians, Jews, Hindus, and Buddhists and destruction of their
houses of worship? How many marches on Washington DC have we seen about
the kidnapping, warping of minds, and murder of Muslim children by
Islamic supremacists? How many marches on Washington DC have we seen
about the sectarian murder and oppression of other Muslims by Islamic
supremacists? How many marches on Washington DC have we seen in support
of those oppressed and murdered by Islamic supremacists because they
dared to speak out in support of universal human rights?
In fact, there has been some activism - by the
Egyptian Copt groups, by
the Responsible for Equality And Liberty human rights group, and by
others genuinely concerned about human rights. But as encouraging as
those small and selected rallies and public awareness events have been,
they have been limited exceptions in eight years of deliberate failure
of activism in our nation's capital on Islamic supremacism.
When thousands are willing to march on Washington DC on taxes and health
care issues, we must ask ourselves what our priorities are when
thousands do not turn out to defy an Islamic supremacist ideology that
is willing to challenge our very universal human rights around the world
and that seeks to destroy our identity as free human beings.
We must all realize that ending "more of the same" begins with our
personal responsibility to change. We are not powerless, we are not
helpless. We can all make a difference. Our real courage in defying
those who would justify and appease Islamic supremacism is what the
American people need to hear today.
On the anniversary of 9/11, we must recognize that the true consequences
of allowing "more of same" has been to send a clear message to Islamic
supremacists that they can terrorize women around the world, they can
terrorize religious minorities around the world, they can terrorize
those who seek their universal human rights around the world -- as long
as they leave us alone.
The result is much worse than "more of the same short-sightedness," but
is nothing less than "more of the same SURRENDER." "Better them than us"
is more than cowardice, it is ignorance of who and what we are
struggling against. An ideology of institutionalized hate that denies
universal human rights for some - will seek to deny universal human
rights for all.
5. The Change We Need - Being Responsible for Equality And Liberty
To challenge Islamic supremacist terrorism, we must challenge Islamic
supremacism as an ideology. It is not enough to have a "war on terror,"
without defining the ideology we are struggling against. Nor is it
enough to merely be angry because we are afraid or we are outraged.
Anger is never enough. Anger alone does not require much courage. We
need to be resolute and defiant against anti-freedom ideologies, but
people will never care to know what we have to say, until they know how
much we care. Being responsible for equality and liberty requires our
compassion towards our fellow human beings to defend their human rights
around the world. We will not obtain such human rights by just bringing
angry people together. We need to offer not a fist, but an outstretched
hand of mercy, equality, and liberty to our fellow human beings.
We need to have the courage of our convictions and honor the courage of
those who have fought to defend our freedoms. It is not acceptable to
tolerate those who would blindly hate, as being on "our side." Every
time we allow hate to grow it becomes a crutch that prevents us from
having the real courage that we need to have as people who are
responsible for equality and liberty.
The real change that we need is to be true to
our identity and our
responsibilities as Americans and as free people. Instead of just anger
at outrages of what we are against, we need to be proactive towards what
we believe. Instead of defending any tactic with the argument that it is
justifiable as a short-term security measure, we need to hold our
government to be consistent on the truths that we hold self-evident.
The change that we need is to be responsible for equality and liberty.
That is where our homeland security begins - with these truths that are
inherent in the very identity of America itself. We cannot sell out, we
cannot bargain away, and we cannot trade equality and liberty to the
hucksters that want us to sell equality and liberty for "progress,"
"safety," or "peace for our times."
We must make it clear to all those who come knocking - that equality and
liberty - is NOT FOR SALE - at any price, at any time.
We also cannot sell out our commitment to equality and liberty under the
table to get more popularity and more supporters among those who promote
hate or are linked to hate groups as an "ally" to challenge Islamic
supremacism. Our conscience must never be blind. Our accountability must
never be situational. Our responsibility needs to be made of steel.
When those of us who challenge Islamic supremacism adopt the amoral view
that "the enemy of my enemy is my friend," we are no different than the
relativist policy wonks who argue in support of "reconciliation" with
the Taliban against Al-Qaeda, or appeasement of Islamic supremacist
nations to "manage" Islamic supremacist terrorists. In the "war of
ideas" challenging Islamic supremacism with equality and liberty,
selling out our cause by siding with or looking the other way about
racial supremacists and hate-mongering "allies" is always wrong. Our
"war of ideas" challenging Islamic supremacism is not an amoral cause;
its basis is our consistent support of inalienable human rights truths.
The change that we need begins with being responsible for equality and
liberty once again. The way we can truly challenge Islamic supremacism
is by consistently prioritizing the equality and liberty that it defies
- as universal human rights.
We need to convince Americans to stop shopping at the "more of the same"
store, and show them the value of our universal human rights as the
strongest defense we have against terrorism and against the ideology of
Islamic supremacism.
6. Why the Change We Need - Begins with Human Rights
If we are seeking to promote equality and liberty, we are seeking to
promote human rights. Moreover, our promotion of human rights should not
just be for any individual identity group (Muslims or non-Muslims), but
must be for all identity groups. Finally, in promoting such human rights
of equality and liberty - we must promote these as universal human
rights for every part of the world - including Saudi Arabia, Pakistan,
Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, and so many other nations where such universal
human rights are denied.
Promotion of such
universal human rights to counter Islamic supremacism
should have been our top priority on September 12. But eight years after
9/11, it remains one of the last priorities of American government
leaders who continue to promote "more of the same," when it come to
refusing to acknowledge (let alone challenge) Islamic supremacism.
But when I address the idea of a human rights-based challenge to Islamic
supremacism to some, their response is to twist their mouth in disgust
and spit out the question "human rights - are you kidding me?" - or
words to that effect. Some have patronizingly chuckled and patted me on
the back, as if to say "you poor sap." I have even seen this done by
some attendees at meetings specifically to address human rights issues.
This is how disillusioned many Americans have become about something
that is a fundamental part of their very identity. This American
identity-crisis on the issue of human rights has been the result of
groups that have had a long history of being inconsistent on human
rights. Such groups have leapt to condemn any drop of human rights
violations by the United States or Israel, but have studiously ignored
the sea of human rights violations that are routine business every day
in Islamic supremacist nations. This does not, by any means, justify any
human rights violations by the United States or Israel (or any other
nation). Two wrongs don't make a right. But what Americans have seen is
an endless litany of media reports by human rights groups that
studiously refuse to acknowledge the most egregiously violators of human
rights when the violators are Islamic supremacist nations, groups, or
individuals. Such deliberate ignorance of Islamic supremacist human
rights violations has been standard operating procedure for much of the news media.
Media outlets view Islamic supremacist segregation and oppression of
women, for example,
as "strict cultural norms." As Americans and as
human beings responsible for equality and liberty, we must reject the
idea that institutionalized hate can ever be justified as "strict"
aspects of someone's "culture."
This identity-crisis on human rights must end, and we must begin that
change. Universal human rights are each of our own human rights, and
those of your family, your children, your neighbors, and people around
the world. We are not dependent on the mainstream media or a few human
rights groups to tell us what our universal human rights are. We know
what our universal human rights of equality and liberty are. We accept
these inalienable human rights as truths that we hold self-evident.
Addressing such human rights for each one of us is not only the media's
responsibility, not only our government's responsibility, not just human
rights groups' responsibility, it is OUR RESPONSIBILITY.
Our universal human rights are a fundamental part of who and what we are
as human beings. Defending these universal human rights is our
responsibility. This is why we cannot afford to be disillusioned with
this defense or leave it to others to be our sole defenders on human
rights. We have a consensus today on the truths that we hold
self-evident; now we need to activate this consensus to start doing
something about our shared responsibility for our universal human
rights.
To challenge Islamic supremacism, our strongest argument will continue
to be the one thing that supremacists cannot tolerate - our
universal human rights of equality and liberty.
I recognize that there will still be those who believe that hate is the
answer. To those who believe that the answer to the Islamic supremacist
ideology we are struggling with - is to hate all Muslims, deport all
Muslims, and bomb all Muslims, honestly ask yourself - how is that
argument working for you and America? Is that argument getting anywhere?
Has anything changed except that your voice continues to get
increasingly marginalized? And how is such open hatred of Muslims much
different than the Islamic supremacist ideology that you claim to be
challenging? Do you really believe that hate is ever going to be the
answer?
We all know the answer to these questions. We also know that those who
argue with blind hate is one of the reasons the public is so afraid to
address this issue. We need an argument that is not based on hate or
anger. We need a solution that will be supported by a consensus of
Americans.
We need a solution based on the universal human rights that are the
truths that we hold self-evident. We need a solution that is urges
others to choose love, not hate.
7. Love Wins
What does
love have to do with it? We must recognize that the ideologies
against universal human rights are based on various forms of
institutionalized hate, whether they are racial or religious
supremacism, communist totalitarianism, or other oppressive ideologies.
You can't love your fellow human being and deny their universal human
rights - such denial requires a rejection of their value and dignity as
a fellow human being.
If you are reading this today, you are living evidence of the idea that
"Love Wins." By our very existence as free people on Earth today, we
demonstrate the power of love over hate. The sickness of hate that seeks
destruction of our fellow human beings and their human rights is the
root issue we challenge in defending equality and liberty. This does not
ignore the horrific destruction that hate has caused: the millions
murdered in the Holocaust, the millions murdered by Communist
totalitarians, and the many killed by those who use ideologies based on
institutionalized hate such as racial or religious supremacism.
Moreover, we acknowledge the havens of institutionalized hate such as
the 1 billion oppressed by Communist totalitarianism, and the countless
others who are oppressed by ideologies such as Islamic supremacism. But
despite such undeniable horrors and tragedies, as humanity, we still
stand here on Earth today. While there are many who hate and who seek
the enslavement or destruction of humanity, there are also many that
love their fellow human beings and are willing to live together in peace
and in support of each other's universal human rights. Despite those who
have repeatedly sought to conquer Earth and to crush the human spirit
completely, those who would defy them have continued to prevent this
from completely happening.
We have seen how people can choose love over hate. We have seen in the
darkest corners of the world - by those brave human beings resisting
Islamic supremacism and seeking women's freedom in Islamic supremacist
nations, by those brave human beings resisting totalitarian hate in
Communist China, and throughout history - there have always been someone
somewhere who said "no" to hate. Even in the most abandoned corners of
Earth and human history - at some point - we have seen that love can
win.
But to have confidence in our future, we must believe more than the idea
that love can win. We must believe in humanity enough to have the
confidence that ultimately, LOVE WILL
WIN.
To defend our universal human rights, we must believe in the power of
love. Our
universal human rights are dependent on our willingness to
love and respect our fellow human beings enough to recognize their
inalienable equality and liberty as truths. We hold such
truths to be
self-evident. Now that is the power of love. It is the sickness of
institutionalized hate that seeks to deny such truths of our
universal human rights.
We must have confidence that our love for our fellow human beings will
demand that we will be responsible for defending such universal human
rights of equality and liberty. We must repeatedly reach out to our
fellow human beings and urge them to Choose Love, Not Hate. It is a
choice, and if our generation is to ever be responsible in our lives,
our focus on choosing love over hate must be our most central priority
for our future and for our children's future.
The insidious sickness of hate is nothing less than a human evil.
Combined with human fear, this is a toxic combination that can undermine
the courage of free people. But we can find the courage of our
convictions to reach beyond fear and to rise above hate.
8. Fearing No Evil
We know the root cause behind our governmental leaders' failure to
confront Islamic supremacism, and its commitment to the "more of the
same" tactics of September 12. It would be convenient to blame only such
governmental leaders, only such relativist policy wonks, only special
interest groups, and only human rights groups that don't have the
courage to honestly address human rights. Just blaming them may make us
feel better. But if we only blame them, we are being dishonest with
ourselves as a nation. All of them do what we tell them and what we fund
them to do. They are merely a part of us.
We know who is to blame and we know why. Every American must ask
themselves if we have really done enough to fight such a mortal foe as
Islamic supremacism that seeks the destruction of our universal human
rights around the world. We all know the answer to this question. Now we
need to admit it and do something to change. That is why we have created
groups such as Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) to help
organize our efforts to defend our
universal human rights.
Since 9/11, as a nation, we have been terrorized. The tactics of
terrorism, to spread fear and hatred, have worked. The tactics of
terrorism to keep us from making the tough decisions - the ones where we
have to be truly responsible for our commitments to universal human
rights - have worked there too. Let's not kid ourselves that sending our
brave young men and women to foreign wars where our governmental leaders
not only refuse to define the enemy and its ideology, but also use the
Pakistani double-play tactics in negotiating with the same enemy we are
supposed to fight, has convinced Islamic supremacists that we won't
tolerate their institutionalized hate.
We have been terrorized, and we have decided for too long to tolerate
the amoral attitude "better them than us." We are one humanity; we are
all part of one Earth. They are part of us. They are our brothers and
sisters in humanity. Each one is a special and unique individual. Each
one's life is the result of the miracle of human birth. There is not a
free world and a slave world. There is not a "Muslim world," and a
"non-Muslim world." There is just
one world, one Earth, our shared home.
An attack on oppressed peoples to deny their equality and liberty is an
attack on us as well. That is what it means to be part of humanity. That
is what it means to believe in universal human rights - the
truths that we
find self-evident
in America -- and
around the
world.
Since 9/11, the policies of denial and appeasement on Islamic
supremacism have sent a clear signal that we are willing to be
terrorized, and that we are willing to surrender as defenders of
universal human rights.
It is time to tear the down the white flag of surrender.
It is time to honor the many sacrifices by so many to protect our
freedoms.
It is time to Fear No Evil.
9. What You Can Do About It
For a long time and by many people, I have been told that Americans are
just not going to understand the need to defy Islamic supremacism and to
defend our universal human rights. I have been told that Americans are
unwilling, perhaps afraid, and certainly not sufficiently motivated to
participate in any organized events to challenge Islamic supremacism and
defend our universal human rights. I have been told this by a number of
scholars and those who have traveled around this country. Many such
"experts" have secretly decided that most Americans are unreachable on
this issue.
Those who promote anti-freedom ideologies also don't believe in you. They too
have written you off, and they are convinced that you won't stand up for
human rights. They are convinced of your surrender.
You need to know that I have proven that "experts" and those who are
convinced of your surrender are wrong.
In Chicago and
Washington DC, I
have proven that you and your fellow Americans will show up, will
participate, and will come out into the streets to defend our universal
human rights and to defy Islamic supremacism.
I believe in the American people.
I believe in you.
So in March 2009, I created our human rights group,
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.). We are determined to reclaim the issue
of defending our human rights to be consistent on supporting equality
and liberty against anti-freedom ideologies, including Islamic
supremacism. We have supporters in Washington DC, in New York, in
Chicago, in California, in New Jersey, in Missouri, in Louisiana, and in
Georgia. We also have supporters in Europe and in Canada. We have shown
the courage of our convictions publicly and repeatedly. We plan to
continue to do so. We have just begun to fight to defend our universal
human rights.
Whether you are interested in our group or another group, make yourself
a promise this anniversary on 9/11 - that you won't just sit behind your
computer and expect that things are going to change without you reaching
out to others publicly.
We can't change the minds and the policies of our representatives until
we change the minds and reach the consciences of our families, our
friends, and our neighbors. We can't urge others to have the courage to
publicly rally for such human rights defied by Islamic supremacism,
until we demonstrate that we have the courage to do that ourselves. We
can't get others to listen to us until we take the time and effort to
listen to others.
We have spent so much time debating who, what, where, and when. Surely
it is time that we refocus our energies publicly on discussing why.
You may think that talking to your friends, family, or neighbors won't
make a difference. You may think that holding a meeting in a public
library won't make a difference. You may think that holding a public
awareness event outdoors won't make a difference. You would be wrong. It
does make a difference. Every time I have spoken there is always at
least one person I have inspired, at least one person who stops to
think, and often at least one person who gives me a hug. Every time we
have shown the courage to do so, we have encouraged others as well.
If we could only get more Americans to reach out to their fellow
Americans, imagine what we could do.
Our message in support of
universal human rights is based on courage and
love. Just like fear, courage is contagious. Just like hate, love is
contagious. When you spread courage and when you spread love, you are
sharing the best and brightest of what you are as a human being. We
don't have to allow fear and hate to imprison our minds and conscience.
We can decide to Fear No Evil. We can decide that Love Will Win.
And as Americans, we can decide to be Responsible for Equality And
Liberty.
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