Today the terrorist group ISIS is holding tens of thousands of people in subjugation to a primitive form of Islamic law. In the United Kingdom, which has a significant Muslim population, there is a huge push to put Shariah law on an equal footing with British law. Here in the United States, Islamic groups are increasingly pressing for concessions on a wide variety of issues. It is not surprising, then, that states are acting to stave off such incursions.
In
a recent article, the Conservative Tribune
details these efforts:
Any time a state wants to ban
Shariah law from being used within its boundaries, Muslim groups — usually led
by the Council on American-Islamic Relations — cry Islamophobia. Which usually
leads to the question, if the groups weren’t in favor of Shariah law, why would
they mind it being banned?
Alabama became the latest state to
ban Shariah law when voters passed a measure adding an amendment to the state
constitution. CAIR said that the motion was “virulently racist” and “outright
hostility towards Muslims.” Alabamans apparently didn’t care what they said.
Either way, Shariah doesn’t exactly have a good brand image.
Perhaps it’s the pre-16th century vibe that the stoning of women and chopping
off of hands creates.
Perhaps it’s the fact that Shariah has been used in American
courtrooms — specifically in Florida, where a judge allowed Muslim law to
supersede American law in a dispute over mosque funds.
Or perhaps it’s because voters don’t want America to become
like a version of the United Kingdom, where roving “Shariah patrols” bully
people they feel aren’t sufficiently Islamic.
A member of one of these patrols said in a video posted to
YouTube, “Ultimately, I want to see every single woman in this country covered
from head to toe, I want to see the hand of the thief cut, I want to see
adulterers stoned to death.”
These are the states that have passed or are considering
anti-Sharia legislation:
- Alabama (two bills)
- Arkansas
- Florida (two bills)
- Indiana (two bills)
- Iowa
- Kentucky
- Mississippi (four bills)
- Missouri (two bills)
- North Carolina
- Oklahoma (seven bills)
- South Carolina (two bills)
- Texas (six bills)
- Virginia
- Washington
- West Virginia
- Wyoming (two bills)
More states may act during 2015.
http://liberty247.net/state-stand-sharia-law/
Comments: Georgia needs to join in.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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