Hundreds
rally at secret Texas Muslim event Media denied access to attend 'Stand with the Prophet'
conference by John Griffing, 1/18/15
GARLAND, Texas – Hundreds of protesters were out
in force Saturday at a Muslim gathering blacked out to the media called “Stand
with the Prophet” whose keynote speaker, an imam from Brooklyn, has been linked
as an unindicted co-conspirator with the deadly 1993 World Trade Center
bombing.
The imam, Siraj Wahhaj, once remarked, “It is my
duty and our duty as Muslims to replace the U.S. Constitution with the Quran.”
President Obama formally invited Wahhaj to give
a “juma,” or invocation, at the Democratic National Convention in 2012, but his
invitation was withdrawn after public criticism of the decision became
widespread.
Hundreds or more protesters attended the rally
and members of the media were denied open access to event attendees, including
WND and the Blaze.
Among the protesters was
commentator and activist Pamela Geller, author of “The Islamization of
America,” who said she was there
to expose “supremacist” control of the event, attacking what she believes was a
concerted effort to keep not just press from the event but ticketed non-Muslims
as well.
“A number of people who were going were refunded
their money late last night and told they were sold out,” she said. “The people
that were going had English-sounding names. So, did they purge people they
didn’t think were Muslims? Isn’t that supremacist?”
Attendees were brought in through a barricade in
cars, and only two attendees were escorted out of the Culwell Center (where the
rally was being held) to talk with available press. These two persons were
accompanied by an event cameraman, who followed them through crowds of
protesters. One of them compared the peaceful protesters outside the event to
ISIS.
“The event today is to honor our prophet
Muhammad, peace be upon him, and also to speak out today about the fact that
Muslims are not violent people,” said spokeswoman Page Spence. “We are peaceful
people. We want nothing more than to be part of this culture and community. We
are level-headed peaceable people who are not trying to convert every single
person to our religion.”
Spence closed her remarks by comparing
protestors to ISIS: “The same people who are protesting are misrepresenting the
Quran the way ISIS does.”
Police instructed WND and other press
representatives that they were not able to interview event attendees except
behind the barricade, which actually encircled the parking area, so as to
prevent any real interaction with attendees. Press requests to interview
attendees with police escorts were denied.
Randy Dunning, a former Garland City Council
member, told WND: “People were brought in cars, but they were cordoned off so
that the media could not actually get at or talk to the attendees of the
conference. In city government, we have to be totally accessible to members of
the media, the public is allowed into our meetings, and everything is done in a
very transparent fashion.”
When asked about the speaker, Siraj Wihhaj, and
his reputation as advocating the subjection of American freedoms and government
to Islamic religious codes, Dunning remarked, “Our freedom is not a suicide
pact. We can’t create a situation where we have one last opportunity to use our
freedom and then use that to invoke some tyranny. … But unfortunately, there
are movements in the world, and I believe radical Islam is one of them, that
believe in one man, one vote, one time.”
On the idea that Islam doesn’t have a “violence
problem” but rather a “messaging problem,” Dunning said he was “mystified by
that idea.” Dunning explained that he would want to know “why are the
kidnappings and the killings happening in the first place and then we can open
up and start having dialogue.”
Protestors included Jeff Higgins, a Vietnam
veteran who lost both legs in service to his country. Higgins said he was
concerned “Islam was gaining a foothold in Garland.”
“This is my backyard,” he explained. “We live
under the American law, not Shariah law and I know that ultimately, that’s
their goal, is to bring Shariah law to America. This is the first kind of,
in-your-face attempt to do that. I know they’ll say this is about peace, but
peace means submission to them.”
Vietnam veteran Tim Lee said he is worried about
his children and the future of America.
“America was built upon God and the word of God,
not Allah, not Muhammad.” He said. “The Muslim religion is a religion of death.
They kill people, innocent people, little children, chop heads off, and we are
going to bring this to Garland, Texas?”
Source:http://www.wnd.com/2015/01/hundreds-rally-at-secret-texas-muslim-confab/
There are many Americans who believe in God, there are many who do not. Most of them probably still do...but that is not the point.
ReplyDelete.
The point is that the United States of America guarantees free speech. Muslims who hate the USA Constitution and free speech (and support terrorism) are not welcome here. They need to go back to the radical sharia law countries from which they came from.