message dated 10/29/2010   [email protected]  writes:

While  this is arguably premature, it highlights a genuine issue that 
deserves  attention.  The key point is:




Duncan,  an attorney, said that his amendment did not target Muslims. 
Instead, he  said, it singles out "activist judges.... That's all I'm picking  
on."





If  we could trust our political and judicial representatives to hold fast 
to core  American values and not cave in to excessive multiculturalism, this 
wouldn't  be a problem.  





_http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-sharia-oklahoma-201010
29,0,116244.story_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-sharia-oklahoma-20101029,0,116244.story)
 



 
Measure would outlaw Islamic law in Oklahoma -- where it  doesn't exist
As the country grapples with its  worst economic downturn in decades and 
persistent unemployment, voters in  Oklahoma next week will take up another 
issue — whether they should pass a  constitutional amendment outlawing Sharia, 
or Islamic law.

Supporters  of the initiative acknowledge that they do not know of a single 
case of Sharia  being used in Oklahoma, which has only 15,000 Muslims.

"Oklahoma does  not have that problem yet," said Republican state Rep. Rex 
Duncan, the author  of the ballot measure, who says supporters in more than 
a dozen states are  ready to place similar initiatives before voters in 
2012. "But why wait until  it's in the courts?"


Some conservative activists contend that the  U.S. is at risk of falling 
under Sharia law. They point to Europe, with its  larger Muslim population and 
various accommodations to the Islamic religious  law.

In England, Muslims can enter special Sharia courts to decide  divorce and 
custody cases if both parties agree. Criminal and other civil  cases are 
still heard in secular courts.

In the U.S., those who warn of  the dangers of Sharia can point to only a 
handful of cases that merely allude  to the centuries-old, complex tangle of 
Muslim religious law. And in none of  the cases cited has any U.S. court 
held that Sharia law is the law of the land  here.

Islamic groups say that the Oklahoma initiative, which was placed  on the 
ballot by the Legislature, is nothing more than an effort to stigmatize  
their religion in order to whip up votes. "There's no threat of Sharia law  
coming to Oklahoma and America, period," said Saad Mohammed of the Islamic  
Society of Greater Oklahoma City. "It's just a scare tactic."

Until  recently there was little campaigning over the measure, known as 
State  Question 755. The only public poll conducted on the matter found it had 
the  support of 49% of voters, with 24% opposed and 27% undecided. That was 
in  July.

Last week a group called Act! for America, which says it exists  to fight 
radical Islam, began airing radio ads and making automated calls to  Oklahoma 
voters, urging approval of the amendment.

"The threat at this  point is not that a country in Europe or the U.S. will 
formally adopt Sharia  law, but that Sharia law will be accommodated 
alongside Western law," Guy  Rodgers, the group's executive director, said via 
e-mail.

Backers of  the amendment have cited only three cases that they contend 
show the threat of  Sharia law. In each case, though, the courts gave no 
special dispensation for  Sharia law. The activists say the judges erred by 
treating Muslims as they  would other religious groups because Islamic law does 
not give women the same  rights as men.

In the first case, a Maryland court upheld a custody  order from a 
Pakistani court that was decided under Islamic law. Judges in the  U.S. are 
required 
by federal law to uphold foreign custody orders if they  comply with 
American legal values, but Rodgers argued that no Islamic court  could ever 
meet 
this criteria.

In the second case, a Texas court  allowed a couple to mediate a property 
dispute with a private arbitrator. That  arbitration was conducted under 
Islamic law.

It is not unheard of to  have religious law dictate private arbitrations in 
the United States — some  observant Jews arbitrate disputes in a rabbinical 
court — but Rodgers  contended that Muslims should be treated differently 
because their legal  system is inherently flawed.

In the third case, a New Jersey judge  ruled that a Muslim man could not be 
guilty of raping his wife because, due to  his religion, he believed that a 
woman is required to have sex with her  husband. An appellate court swiftly 
overturned the ruling, noting that it  conflicted with long-established 1st 
Amendment jurisprudence that holds that  religion does not excuse criminal 
conduct. The appellate court noted that the  same rationale was used, 
erroneously, to justify polygamous Mormon marriages  in the 19th century.

Duncan, an attorney, said that his amendment did  not target Muslims. 
Instead, he said, it singles out "activist judges....  That's all I'm picking 
on."

The measure also would ban judges from  relying on foreign laws in any way, 
a reaction to a 2005 Supreme Court ruling  that cited other countries' 
legal norms in outlawing the execution of  minors.

"When you have a justice on the United States Supreme Court who  has stated 
publicly that the _U.S.  Supreme Court_ 
(mip://02ba3210/topic/crime-law-justice/justice-system/u.s.-supreme-court-ORGOV0000126.topic)
  ought to be able 
to look to the laws of other countries, it  isn't a stretch to think that 
some lower court state judge, be it in New  Jersey or some other state, would 
come to the same conclusion," Duncan  said.

Mohammed, of the Islamic Society, said that he feared that the  measure 
could lead to politicians in other states trying to cash in on bashing  Sharia 
law and Islam. "This garbage could really make things bad for Muslims,"  he 
said.

On the other hand, he added, since there is no Sharia in  Oklahoma, the 
amendment is also largely harmless. "I think so little of it,"  Mohammed said. 
"Whether it passes or not, I don't think it's going to affect  anyone."

[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   



-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
<[email protected]>
Google Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 


-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to