Not All Muslims Are the Same. Radical Islamism in the U.S. Must Be Stopped | Opinion

There is a grave difference in ideology among persons claiming to be Muslims in America. Islamists are dangerous extremists. Muslims following Islam but rejecting Islamism are nether radical nor extreme.

Take Imam Yasir Qadhi, the spiritual leader behind Texas’ East Plano Islamic Center (EPIC) City housing project. He is an admirer of Yusuf Al Qardawi—the Muslim Brotherhood ideologue. Qadhi also defended convicted Islamist extremist Aafia Siddiqui, who is now serving 86 years in federal prison for providing material support to Al-Qaeda.

Aligning with Islamist misogyny, Qadhi dismissed the Women Life Freedom movement in Iran. His speeches indicate he is at least an Islamist apologist, but more accurately a hardcore Muslim Brotherhood Islamist and staunch Hamas supporter.

Qadhi has addressed the Islamic Circle of North America and Muslim American Society conferences—both reportedly Muslim Brotherhood organizations—and in these meetings refused to condemn the October 7 Hamas attack on Israel.

In their own promotion, EPIC City aims to build a mosque, school, kindergarten, and community college and facilities for the elderly—capturing generations of Muslims from cradle to college, isolating them from wider society.

Some Muslims state over 75 percent of EPIC City’s housing associationfees will finance the local mosque, purposefully deterring non-Muslims from moving in—an intrinsically discriminatory practice. RepublicanTexas Senator John Cornyn has asked the Department of Justice to investigate EPIC City’s developers.

This is an opportunity to examine not only the EPIC City project but radical Islamism’s potential to threaten the fabric of American society.

Extensive investigations into the covert activity of America’s Muslim Brotherhood have been documented. The cudgel of Islamophobia silences critics since Islamists portray themselves as persecuted Muslim minorities. Islamists—seen through the lens of creed—benefit from the protection of the U.S. Constitution, which enshrines the right to religious freedom for all, failing to recognize Islamist beliefs as political totalitarianism. Yet American democracy is not safeguarded from encroaching Islamism.

As an observant Muslim, I have no objection to Muslims building mosques, but developments intended to silo Muslims are certain to result in not parallel but closed societies, fueling Islamism

‎מֵאִיר

Article URL : https://www.newsweek.com/not-all-muslims-are-same-radical-islamism-us-must-stopped-opinion-2069193