Thursday, 1 April 2010



The Jihadists Next Door

Dear Harold,

Homegrown terrorism continues to increase—as we predicted a year ago.
(See the Investors Business Daily editorial below).

The next-to-last paragraph is especially worth highlighting:
  Muslims see what's going on in their community.
So why the conspiracy of silence?
Why aren't self-proclaimed "moderate" Muslim groups and mosque
leaders standing up  and condemning this rampant jihadism in their midst?
The problem is, our government and the media keep going to the wrong leaders and
groups, like CAIR, the
Council on American-Islamic Relations.

They should be talking to Muslims like Dr. Tawfik Hamid, whose recent commentary,
“A Message to the Muslim World,” is a courageous and candid exhortation to the Muslim
World to take
 a long, hard look at its supremacist ideology.
 





IBD EDITORIALS

The Jihadists Next Door

Posted 03/15/2010 06:42 PM ET

Security: The arrests of three new homegrown terrorists, including two "Jihad Janes" and
an al-Qaida suspect who infiltrated nuclear plants, confirm a rise in homegrown jihadist activity.

Sharif Mobley is one of the latest jihadists next door. Before he was rounded up in a sweep of suspected al-Qaida terrorists in Yemen, Mobley worked at five nuclear plants in New
Jersey, Maryland and Pennsylvania. He shot two guards, killing one, before his capture.

Mobley grew up in New Jersey before converting to Islam. His militancy shocked an old
high school friend,
who ran into him after returning from an Army tour in Iraq. Mobley told him: "Get the hell away
from me, you
 Muslim killer!"

Then there's Colleen LaRose, aka Jihad Jane, who was arrested in Philadelphia for
allegedly plotting to kill a
Swedish cartoonist who'd "offended" Muslims. Jamie Paulin-Ramirez of Denver was also
arrested in connection
with the assassination plot.

All three suspects are U.S. citizens from different parts of the country. One is black, one
white and one formerly married to a Hispanic immigrant. Two, shockingly, are women.
While each suspect has a different background,
all three are Muslim converts radicalized over the Internet — a dangerous trend.

American converts are al-Qaida's prime recruits right now, because they have a better
 chance of slipping through security checkpoints.

Many such as Mobley are flocking to Yemen, where another American turncoat, Anwar
Awlaki, recruits Westerners via the Web. Awlaki allegedly recruited the crotch bomber from
 London, then trained him for his  suicide mission in Yemen. He also advised the Fort Hood
terrorist online.

LaRose is said to have recruited others online to kill the cartoonist. Her accomplice
 Paulin-Ramirez married an  Algerian whom she met online. A straight-A nursing student,
the 31-year-old mother of one spent much of her
 time surfing jihadist Web sites. Both women said they'd be willing to blow themselves up for
Islam.

While the essential ingredient in these cases is militant Islam, we have to wonder if the left
 isn't making otherwise normal Americans vulnerable to such treasonous seductions. After all,
 the hate-America lobby — led by the
American Civil Liberties Union and often cheered by the media — has comforted even the
 most guilty in the war
on terror, including the 9/11 mastermind and other Gitmo detainees.

Take Omar Hammami. A smart American college kid who grew up Baptist in the Alabama
 suburbs, he's now an
 al-Qaida field commander in Somalia wanted by the FBI.

What happened? He became consumed with events in Iraq and Afghanistan and
began subscribing to conspiracy theories about 9/11. He learned to hate his country, which he
calls a legitimate "target" for attack.

Islamic apologists in academia and the media keep trying to dismiss the radicalization trend,
but they're whistling
past the graveyard. A new Duke University study claims that "only" 139 Muslim Americans
have been involved in terrorism since 9/11 (including 41, or 30%, in 2009 alone).

But the report, which got a big splash in the media, is laughably incomplete. It omits some of
 the feds' most
celebrated terrorist convictions. It also excludes any U.S. Muslims convicted of financing terror.
And these are just the homegrown terrorists who got caught. How many others are out there?

New Mexico-born Awlaki has 4,800 Facebook friends. He has thousands of followers in
America. At mosques and Islamic bookstores across the country, they buy his sermons
extolling jihad and "martyrdom." They're even sold
as CD box sets.

Homegrown terror is a signal event threatening homeland security, yet it seems to have
 caught Homeland Security  chief Janet Napolitano napping.
 She still sees white militia groups and anti-government extremists as the top threat.
Nothing could be more wrong.

Muslims see what's going on in their community. So why the conspiracy of silence?
Why aren't self-proclaimed "moderate" Muslim groups and mosque leaders standing
up and condemning this rampant jihadism in their midst?

After five young Virginia jihadists last year were caught training in Pakistan, Muslim
 leaders promised to speak out  in a big way against such radicalization. It's been months.
We're still waiting.


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Make sure you receive all of your messages from ACT for America. Add
actforamerica@donationnet.net to your address book as an approved email sender. If you found this message in your "Bulk" or "Spam" folder, please click the "Not Spam" button to notify your provider that these are emails you want to receive.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 

ACT for America 
P.O. Box 12765
Pensacola, FL 32591