The pro-Islam bias of Lane Community  College 
 
 
LCC is determined to destroy itself. Not welcome news for people in the  
Eugene community
who have had reason to take pride in the college for the services it has  
provided the city
over the years. But because the administration has seen fit to take a  
strongly pro-Islam
partisan position, because it denies the value of free speech in  
disallowing a critical approach
to Islam as having objective value, it deserves clear  and outspoken 
opposition.
 
The article in the Register-Guard  reeks of Political Correctness  
assumptions and
Leftist political values. It also is filled with innuendo, and it takes no  
genius to
see the biases at play which demean the views and values of Barry Sommer,  
the
scheduled instructor, while taking the position that the "only" reasonable  
approach
to the topic of teaching Islam is the position of the Left-wing of the  
Democratic Party,
that is, to be supportive of Muslim anti-Semitism, of Muslim values which  
demand
draconian punishments against homosexuals, of Muslim values  which require 
inferior 
legal status of women, of Muslim religious  teachings which command that 
believers 
take part in violent jihad against people of other faiths, and of Muslim  
values which 
demand that critics of Islam should be silenced  --in other words,  which 
blatantly
oppose the First Amendment to the US Constitution.
 
There is no excuse for the irresponsibility of the administration of Lane  
Community College
and even less for the fact that, on the issue of Islam, the administration  
and most of the
faculty obviously are hopelessly ignorant of even the basics of Islam, have 
 never
researched Islam in any meaningful way, simply do not know what in the  hell
they are talking about, and on the basis of gross ignorance and overt  
political biases
have now seen fit to cancel a class that had the potential to finally make  
a difference
for the good.
 
The administration of the college deserves our deepest contempt.
 
Billy Rojas
Eugene, Oregon
 
============================================================
 
 
 
 
 
Islam class to stay canceled, LCC says
Despite the threat of a lawsuit, college officials vow they won’t bow to  
pressure from outside groups
 
By _Greg  Bolt_ (mailto:[email protected])  
The Register-Guard
Published: Saturday, Dec 11, 2010  05:01AM  

 
____________________________________
 
 
Lane Community College has been flooded by mostly  out-of-state phone calls 
and e-mails since its decision to cancel a noncredit  course on Islam, but 
LCC officials say they have no intention of reinstating the  class. 
However, the instructor now has the backing of a  conservative legal group 
that has sent LCC a letter demanding that it reinstate  the class or face a 
federal lawsuit claiming breach of contract and violation of  free speech 
rights. The letter was sent by the American Center for Law &  Justice, a group 
founded by televangelist Pat Robertson that has championed  conservative 
causes. 
LCC said it won’t bow to the pressure and maintains  that its decision to 
cancel the class was not influenced by outside groups. 
“We really take our responsibility for instruction  and creating the 
learning environment seriously, and that responsibility resides  within Lane 
Community College and it’s not based on outside individuals or  entities 
telling 
us what to do,” said Sonya Christian, LCC’s vice president for  academic 
and student affairs. 
Instead of reinstating the class, the college plans  to add a credit course 
on Islam in spring term taught by UO religious studies  professor Frederick 
Colby, who specializes in early Islamic thought and popular  Islam. 
Christian said LCC also is planning a series of public seminars on Islam  
during 
winter term that will be aimed at a general audience. 
But that hasn’t stopped the stream of protests  pouring into the campus, 
primarily from partisans of the two national  organizations that stirred up 
the controversy last week. LCC has received more  than 1,300 phone calls and 
hundreds of e-mails on the subject in the week since  the issue surfaced. 
The college has found itself caught in the middle of  what has become a 
name-calling squabble between two national groups that each  accuse the other 
of being extremists. One of the groups, Act! for America, has  mobilized its 
national network of supporters and urged them to shower the  college with 
protests over the cancellation. 
The other group, the Council on American-Islamic  Relations, arguably 
started the fracas when it sent LCC an e-mail condemning it  for offering the 
class because the teacher of the class, Barry Sommer, is  president of the 
local chapter of Act! for America. CAIR accuses Act! for  America of 
anti-Islamic bigotry; Act! for America accuses CAIR of being a front  for 
terrorists. 
For its part, LCC maintains it already had flagged  the Islam class as 
inappropriate for the community education roster when CAIR  fired the first 
salvo. Christian said the class was canceled out of concern that  the subject 
would be better addressed in a class offered for academic credit and  taught 
by a faculty member with academic credentials in the subject. 
“When we made the decision to cancel the class, in  all honesty it was 
because when we looked at it we wanted the topic to be  considered within sort 
of the core academy in a careful, thoughtful way,” she  said. “It definitely 
wasn’t shying away from multiple perspectives. But the  treatment of the 
topic needed to be carefully considered.” 
But Sommer said he’s upset at LCC’s actions. He  denies being an “
Islamophobe,” as the CAIR letter charged, and said his goal was  to provide a 
factual and historical overview of Islam. 
“The purpose is not indoctrination,” he said. “The  purpose is education.”
 
In the demand letter, an attorney with the American  Center for Law & 
Justice said LCC created a contractual relationship by  approving Sommer’s 
course 
proposal and putting it on the community education  class schedule. It also 
accuses LCC of canceling the class because of pressure  from CAIR and said 
that violates Sommer’s free speech rights. 
“The law is clear,” the letter states. “LCC must  reinstate Mr. Sommer’s 
course and allow him to teach.” 
The fracas started late last week when the college  sent an e-mail to 
Sommer saying it was canceling his class, which was to be  called “What Is 
Islam?”
 The class was to be offered under LCC’s community  education program, 
courses intended for personal enrichment that earn no  academic credit and can 
be taught by anyone with some knowledge of the  subject. 
The e-mail did not state a reason for the  cancellation, and Sommer said 
the college still has not contacted him to explain  the decision. The move 
happened about the same time the college received the  CAIR letter, but LCC 
officials insist they already began reviewing the class the  previous day after 
being asked about it by a local television station. 
The vast majority of community education classes are  “how-to” courses for 
hobbyists or people who want to know more about cooking,  computers, 
travel, languages or similar subjects. LCC at times offers classes  under the 
general heading of culture, but they are relatively few and only  occasionally 
tread into areas of politics or religion, Christian said. 
However, the college did offer a somewhat similar  course last year. The 
class Muslim Women and Culture was on the community  education schedule for 
fall term 2009, but it ended up being canceled. 
The college still is reviewing its non-credit class  approval process to 
determine whether Sommer’s course on Islam should have been  accepted in the 
first place, Christian said. But because such classes are  offered only for 
personal enjoyment, the college doesn’t do the kind of rigorous  research and 
planning that go into courses given for academic credit. 
A person who wants to teach a community education  course at LCC fills out 
an employment application and a form describing the  course and laying out 
the areas to be covered in each class. The person is  interviewed by an LCC 
staff member before the class is accepted or rejected. 
Christian said course proposals regularly are  rejected because they don’t 
fit in with the college’s mission or because there’s  no clear need for the 
course. She said the college makes it clear to all  prospective community 
education teachers that the school reserves the right to  cancel any class 
right up until the first day of class, something she said  happens regularly 
for a variety of reasons. 
Also, classes that don’t attract at least a  half-dozen students by the 
week before the term starts are canceled. About 25 to  30 courses are canceled 
each term because they haven’t attracted enough  students, Christian said. 
No students had signed up for Sommer’s class, but it  was still four weeks 
until the start of winter term and the class had been open  for registration 
less than three days when it was  canceled

-- 
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