8/25/2017 8:54:45 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected] writes:
 
 

NY Times
Why Is the  Southern Poverty Law Center Targeting Liberals?

 
 
By:  AYAAN HIRSI ALI
August  24, 2017
 
 
 
 
Since the violence in  Charlottesville 10 days ago, when white supremacists 
left one young woman dead  and 19 others injured, the Southern Poverty Law 
Center has hit the jackpot.  The Alabama-based nonprofit is set to receive 
millions of dollars in donations  from some of the nation’s deepest of 
pockets. Apple pledged $1 million. JP  Morgan Chase & Co.: half a million. 
George 
and Amal Clooney even got in on  the action, promising to donate another $1 
million. 
Like every other decent  American, I was outraged that the president of the 
United States equivocated  in condemning neo-Nazi activity in this country. 
Nazism — not to mention white  supremacy and racial bigotry — has no place 
in a civilized society. 
But is donating money to  the S.P.L.C. the best way to combat this poison? 
I think not. If Tim Cook and  Jamie Dimon had done their due diligence, they 
would know that the S.P.L.C. is  an organization that has lost its way, 
smearing people who are fighting for  liberty and turning a blind eye to an 
ideology and political movement that has  much in common with Nazism. 
I am a black woman, a  feminist and a former Muslim who has consistently 
opposed political violence.  The price for expressing my beliefs has been 
high: I must travel with armed  security at all times. My friend and 
collaborator Theo van Gogh was _murdered_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/03/world/europe/dutch-filmmaker-an-islam-critic-is-killed.html)
  in  broad daylight. 
Yet the S.P.L.C. has the audacity to label me an  “extremist,” including 
my name in a “_Field Guide to Anti-Muslim  Extremists_ 
(https://www.splcenter.org/20161025/journalists-manual-field-guide-anti-muslim-extremists)
 ” that 
it published on  its website last October._Continue reading the main  story_ 
(https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/24/opinion/southern-poverty-law-center-libe
rals-islam.html?ref=opinion#story-continues-2) 

 
 
 
In that guide, the S.P.L.C. claims that I am a  “propagandist far outside 
the political mainstream” and warns journalists to  avoid my “damaging 
misinformation.” These groundless smears are deeply  offensive, as I have 
dedicated much of my adult life to calling out the true  extremists: 
organizations 
such as Al Qaeda and ISIS. Yet you will look in vain  for the S.P.L.C.’s “
Field Guide to Muslim Extremists.” No such list  exists. 
That’s a shame, because  Islamic extremism — a movement that aims to 
impose a caliphate and Sharia law  by violent means — is as toxic as white 
supremacy. In the past two decades, it  has certainly been responsible for many 
more deaths. 

Like neo-Nazis, Islamic  extremists despise liberalism. They deny the 
equality of the sexes, justify  wife-beating and, in some cases, even the 
enslavement of female unbelievers.  The Islamic State and groups like it 
regularly_murder_ 
(http://www.latimes.com/world/middleeast/la-fg-islamic-state-anti-gay-violence-20160613-snap-story.html)
  gay  people in the most heinous ways. 
Islamic extremists are also virulently  anti-Semitic, like the Nazis before 
them. And like today’s American Nazis,  they brandish swastikas, chant slurs 
and peddle conspiracy  theories. 
The terrible  consequences of Islamic extremism are on display on a weekly 
basis around the  world. In the days after Charlottesville, five men in 
Barcelona used a van and  knives to kill 14 and injure scores of innocent 
people. Another Islamic  extremist went on a _stabbing rampage_ 
(https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/22/world/europe/finland-stabbing-terrorism.html)
  in  
Finland. In wealthy societies like the United States, most plots to kill in  
the 
name of Islamist supremacy are foiled. But poorer societies in the  developing 
world lack the means to do that, which is why the majority of  victims of 
the extremists are in countries like Afghanistan, Iraq, Nigeria,  Pakistan 
and Syria. 
It is not surprising  that, when I point out such facts, I am viciously 
attacked and threatened by  those who are dedicated to Islamic extremism. But 
it has always struck me as  odd that so many supposed liberals in the West 
take their side rather than  mine, as happened three years ago, when Brandeis 
University rescinded their  offer to me of an honorary degree. I would have 
expected a civil-rights  organization supposedly committed to justice to 
speak out against those who  would oppress women, gays and people of other 
faiths. But the S.P.L.C. has  nothing to say about Islamic extremists; only 
about their  opponents. 
Another voice the  S.P.L.C. has tried to silence is that of _Maajid Nawaz_ 
(https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/28/magazine/can-a-former-islamist-make-it-co
ol-to-be-moderate.html) , who was included in the same field guide as me.  
(He is _suing_ 
(https://www.mediaite.com/tv/maajid-nawaz-tells-bill-maher-hes-suing-southern-poverty-law-center-for-defamation/)
  the  organization for 
defamation.) Mr. Nawaz has _written extensively_ (http://maajidnawaz.com/)  
about  his past as an Islamic extremist in England and Egypt, just as I’ve 
written  about my time in the Muslim Brotherhood as a teenager. For the past 
decade, he  has run Quilliam, an organization dedicated to countering 
Islamic extremism in  Britain and elsewhere, notably in Pakistan. 
I met Mr. Nawaz in 2010  at a debate in New York City, where the subject 
was the nature of Islam. Our  passionate disagreement was on _full display_ 
(http://www.intelligencesquaredus.org/debates/islam-religion-peace) : Mr. 
Nawaz is a secular Muslim, whereas I am not a  believer any longer. Yet we both 
agreed the path to a successful reformation  of Islam lies in more debate, 
more scrutiny and more critical thinking. It is  exactly these activities 
that our opponents, now including the S.P.L.C.,  describe as extremism. 
Cui bono? That question is nearly always the right  one to ask of 
organizations like the S.P.L.C. Who really benefits from their  activities? 
Repeatedly, and for more than a decade, journalists at  publications ranging 
from 
_Harper’s_ (https://harpers.org/archive/2000/11/the-church-of-morris-dees/)  to 
_Politico_ 
(http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/06/28/morris-dees-splc-trump-southern-poverty-law-center-215312)
  to _The Nation_ 
(https://www.thenation.com/article/king-hate-business/)  to _The Weekly 
Standard_ 
(http://www.weeklystandard.com/print/king-of-fearmongers/article/714573)  have  
pointed out that the center’s founders seem more interested in profiting off  
the anxieties and white guilt of Northern liberals than in upholding the 
civil  rights of poor Southerners, or anyone else. There’s a less cynical  
explanation, though, which is that liberals are deeply and increasingly  
uncomfortable with calling out Islamic extremism for fear of being smeared as  “
Islamophobic,” or worse. 
Regardless, the  S.P.L.C.’s decision to target those who speak up for the 
civil rights of  Muslims is a travesty. 
Muslims today cannot  freely debate the role of their religion in most 
Muslim-majority countries,  where the charges of heresy or apostasy can mean a 
death sentence or a lynch  mob. Here in the West, too, free discussion of 
Islam is getting harder not  least because Islamic organizations like the 
Council on American-Islamic  Relations pounce on any criticism of Islam, 
branding 
it “hate speech,” the  modern word for heresy. Unwittingly or not, the 
S.P.L.C. is abetting Islamic  extremists by branding critical thinkers like Mr. 
Nawaz and me  “extremists.” 
Taking  a stand against the neo-Nazi display we saw in Charlottesville is 
an impulse  that should be cheered — and Apple, JP Morgan and the Hollywood 
A-list can and  should do more to counter political violence and intolerance 
in all its forms.  But they need to find more trustworthy and deserving 
partners to work with  than the  S.P.L.C.



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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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