Thomas More Law Center announces victory in free speech case

Internet jounalists won an important victory in a Texas Appeals Court decision handed down last week.   Hat tip:  Bill.   In the case an internet journalist had been sued by seven Islamic organizations because of an article he had written about two organizations that themselves did not challenge his assertions that they were connected to radical Islamic groups.   From the Thomas More Law Center:

ANN ARBOR, MI – On July 16, 2009, seven Texas-area Islamic organizations lost an appeal of the unanimous ruling of the Texas Second Court of Appeals at Forth Worth, which protected the free speech rights of internet journalists and at the same time dealt a blow to the legal jihad being waged by radical Muslim groups throughout the United States. The Islamic groups asked for a reconsideration of the appellate court’s recent decision through what is known as an en banc opinion (appeal to the whole court, not just a panel of the court). The Court ruling, in a per curiam (in the name of the whole court) two page opinion, upheld the dismissal of the libel lawsuit filed against internet reporter Joe Kaufman by the seven Islamic organizations.

The lawsuit against Kaufman was funded by the Muslim Legal Fund for America. The head of that organization, Khalil Meek, admitted on a Muslim talk radio show that lawsuits were being filed against Kaufman and others to set an example. Indeed, for the last several years, Muslim groups in the U.S. have engaged in the tactic of filing meritless lawsuits to silence any public discussion of Islamic terrorist threats. This tactic, referred to by some as Islamist Lawfare uses our laws and legal system to silence critics and promote Islamic rule in America.

It was a lost opportunity when the groups Kaufman supposedly maligned didn’t sue Kaufman, presumably making the judgement that they would have much to lose in the discovery process.

Kaufman, a full-time investigative reporter, has written extensively on Radical Islamic terrorism in America. He was sued because of his September 28, 2007 article titled “Fanatic Muslim Family Day” published by Front Page Magazine, a major online news website. Kaufman’s article exposed the Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA) and the Islamic Association of Northern Texas (IANT) ties to the radical terrorist group Hamas. 

Kaufman’s article called ICNA a radical Muslim organization that has ties to Al-Qaeda and the Muslim Brotherhood. According to Kaufman, ICNA is an umbrella organization for South Asian-oriented mosques and Islamic centers in the United States created as an American arm of the Muslim Brotherhood (MB) of Pakistan. 

Significantly, neither ICNA nor IANT, which were mentioned in Kaufman’s article, sued Kaufman. It is speculated that ICNA and IANT were afraid of being subjected to pretrial discovery.

We are media (at least in Texas).

In what should be welcome news to internet journalists, the Appellate Court specifically rejected the Plaintiffs’ contention that Kaufman is not a “media defendant.” The Court held that the Texas statute that gives procedural protections to traditional electronic and print media, including the right to a pretrial appeal, also covers internet journalists. Thus, the Texas Statue entitled Kaufman the right to appeal the lower court’s denial of his motion to dismiss the frivolous libel claim before a time-consuming and expensive trial. Most parties have to wait until after a trial before they can appeal an unfavorable lower court ruling.

Ah, free speech—-America’s bulwark against tyrants!

Volunteer charges that Utah resettlement agencies are not doing their job

Here we go again, another article about Iraqis on the verge of being evicted (supposedly) from their apartments in Utah because they can’t find work and their government support is running out.   But, if I’m reading this correctly a volunteer is suggesting more could be done and the resettlement agencies there are not doing it.  Granted this section of the story is not clearly written, but because we have heard this before elsewhere, I assume Denise Devynck is saying what I think she is saying.

Some Iraqi refugees have already left the state because they couldn’t support their families. Case workers are dealing with more refugees from more countries than ever before, and there is less money to help.

“That I was able to find 10 jobs in four days, I do not understand how the system is failing these people,” said Denise Devynck.  [Devynck is saying, I think, that she found 10 potential jobs for refugees in a brief period of time.]

She got involved with Iraqi refugees a month ago and can’t hide her frustration. There is a resistance to moving refugees out of the Salt Lake Valley, away from support services and people from their home country.  [Who is resisting?]

Devynck believes finding host families and jobs in any setting should be a higher priority.  [Again, this isn’t clear but it appears she is saying that finding sponsors to help and jobs isn’t high on the resettlement agencies priority lists.]

“The job specialists at these agencies have not sent them on interviews to get jobs,” she said. “So all this time the money’s running out, these guys [Iraqis?] are volunteering, they’re not getting jobs.”

I get the feeling that the reporter couldn’t quite believe what he was hearing—that someone was criticizing a saintly resettlement agency—but felt he couldn’t completely ignore this woman’s complaint either, so it’s written in such a way that one is forced to read between the lines.

I’m going to sound cynical (as usual!), but what if the news of suffering Iraqi refugees could cause more funding to flow from the federal government to the federal refugee resettlement contractors (Top Ten are here*), would they, the contractors, take advantage of the situation and drum up these sob stories?   Is that what the IRC’s crisis report was meant to do?

* A point of information to new readers, your local resettlement agency is a subcontractor to one of the top ten.  Those ten big contractors have a monopoly on the program and get all the federal contracts to resettle refugees and then dole out the taxpayer funds to several hundred ‘affiliates.’    Besides the money that they get directly from the US State Department for initial resettlement, they receive millions of dollars of grant money from the Dept. of Health and Human Services (Office of Refugee Resettlement).

This is our 400th post on Iraqi refugees!

Those Gazans just won’t go away!

Update July 18: Phyllis Chesler changed her post, after I posted the comments following this paragraph in her comments and we had a short email discussion. I recommend to our readers her Pajamas Media blog, where I read the post in question; she deals with many of the same issues we write about here, with an emphasis on women’s issues, especially Muslim women.

Original post —

In the piece I cited in my last post, Phyllis Chesler unwittingly repeats a false story that we’ve repeatedly tried to correct, but we don’t have a wide enough readership to kill it outright.

It’s based on a Presidential Determination from January, in which President Obama allocated “$20.3 million from the United States Emergency Refugee and Migration Assistance Fund for the purpose of meeting unexpected and urgent refugee and migration needs” for Palestinians in Gaza.

The apparently obvious — but wrong — conclusion is that our government is bringing Palestinians from Gaza into the U.S.  That is NOT what the order is about. It was given after Israel went to war in Gaza to stop the constant rocket attacks. Its purpose was to provide funds for Gazan Palestinians within their own country who were displaced from their homes or otherwise in special need from the war. The language is boilerplate, but “migration” is not the same as “immigration” in any case. 

We would be the last people in the world to cover up for Obama, or to minimize the damage he is doing to our country. In this case, he is not doing what he is accused of. And why would he? From his point of view the residents of Gaza are more useful where they are, where they can rain down more rockets on Israel and create more anti-Israel lies for CNN. I wish people would spend their energy fighting the many real threats we face, not making up phantom ones. Here are the posts we’ve done on the issue with more details:

January 30, by Ann: Obama sends more emergency funds to Gaza

February 11, by Judy: Hamas members are NOT flooding into the U.S. from Gaza

February 21, by Judy: Hamas members flooding into U.S.? Maybe even terrorist prisoners! (Or not.)

February 23, by Ann: Palestinians as refugees to the U.S.?

March 11, by Judy: Senator Kyl bases amendment on misinterpretation about Palestinian refugees

And by the way, that $20 million mentioned in the Presidential Directive was only a quick little injection of money into Gaza. Obama followed it up with almost a billion additional dollars shortly afterwards. It all went into Gaza, to Hamas, or maybe into Swiss bank accounts; who knows? But it did not bring any Gazans here.

Obama may be opening the door to millions of asylum applicants

Update July 21st:  For readers wanting more details on this decision by the Obama Administration, the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) has a discussion with links here (scroll down to the third item).  Hat tip:  Paul

The New York Times reported on Wednesday:

The Obama administration has opened the way for foreign women who are victims of severe domestic beatings and sexual abuse to receive asylum in the United States. The action reverses a Bush administration stance in a protracted and passionate legal battle over the possibilities for battered women to become refugees.

In addition to meeting other strict conditions for asylum, abused women will need to show that they are treated by their abuser as subordinates and little better than property, according to an immigration court filing by the administration, and that domestic abuse is widely tolerated in their country. They must show that they could not find protection from institutions at home or by moving to another place within their own country.

The case that is in question is that of a Mexican woman seeking asylum, fearful of being murdered by her common-law husband. He forced her to live with him, stole her salary, repeatedly raped her at gunpoint and tried to kill her. Last year Bush administration officials argued in court that her case did not meet the legal standard for asylum. Now the Obama administration is reversing that stance.

The question of asylum for battered women has been around since 1996, when

a Guatemalan woman named Rody Alvarado was granted asylum by an immigration court, based on her account of repeated beatings by her husband. Three years later, an immigration appeals court overturned Ms. Alvarado’s asylum, saying she was not part of any persecuted group under American law.  

Apparently that case is not yet resolved.

Since then Ms. Alvarado’s case has stalled as successive administrations debated the issue, with immigration officials reluctant to open a floodgate of asylum petitions from battered women across the globe. During the Clinton administration, Attorney General Janet Reno proposed regulations to clarify the matter, but they have never gone into effect. In a briefing paper in 2004, lawyers for the Department of Homeland Security raised the possibility of asylum for victims of domestic violence, but the Bush administration never put that into practice in immigration court, Professor Musalo said.

Now Homeland Security officials say they are returning to views the department put forward in 2004, refining them to draw conditions sufficiently narrow that battered women would prevail in only a limited number cases.

It’s a thorny problem. Whose heart doesn’t go out to a woman with a story like the Mexican asylum seeker? But domestic violence (what a sterile term!) and sexual abuse are so common around the world that, as Phyllis Chesler points out,

Fellow Americans: Prepare to receive the entire female population of Pakistan sometime soon. And that’s just for starters. I don’t oppose this—but I honestly don’t know if we can economically afford to do it. Given the recession/depression, I rather doubt we can. But get ready for something like this to happen anyway.

…. Studies show that 50-90% of Pakistani women are routinely beaten, even when they are pregnant, and that daughter-beating and wife-beating are not considered crimes. Pakistani men will sometimes publicly gang-rape a young girl in order to falsely “avenge” another crime committed by a member of their own clan; be-head, throw acid at, or burn alive a girl or woman who has offended their family or political-religious honor; they will marry a ten-year-old daughter to a fifty-year-old man in order to settle a debt, or to receive a small sum of money. In Pakistan, most honor killings of girls and women are not prosecuted either. In one study, my own, first published in Middle East Quarterly, almost half the honor murders perpetrated in the West were perpetrated by Pakistani men or Pakistani families.

 Even if Homeland Security drew narrow guidelines, there would still be plenty of eligible women just in Pakistan, and many more in other Muslim countries, plus those in other countries. Chesler seems to be suggesting that it would be a good idea to open our doors to battered women, but not their batterers, if we weren’t in a recession. She makes this excellent point:

Male domestic violence is a global phenomenon. Why single out one country—isn’t that “racist” or “Islamophobic” and doesn’t that suggest that all Pakistani Muslims are batterers or tend to batter women more than, let’s say, Christian-American men do?

But they do. They are trained to do so. Their culture has normalized woman-battering while the Big Bad West has actually gone and criminalized it, tried to shelter its victims and prosecute their persecutors. True, we have done so rather late in the day and in an imperfect way. But this level of progress does not exist in the Arab Middle East, Africa, or central Asia where even honor murders are accepted, rarely reported as such, even more rarely prosecuted, and where reduced sentences apply to this but to no other crime.

I’m sorry, Phyllis, and I’m terribly sorry for all those women, but it would be impossible to provide asylum to the millions of deserving women around the world. Of course, just because it’s impossible doesn’t mean Obama mightn’t try to do it. Not because he’s such a great humanitarian, but because it would overload the system and cause that much more chaos.

This issue bears watching.

Immigration, the fall of Capitalism/the rise of Islam, and where can we get a Geert Wilders?

Just today readers sent me three bits of information I’m pulling together under that title and will file in our “stealth jihad” category.

The first is from Blulitespecial and it’s about a conference that will be held in Chicago this weekend entitled ‘The Fall of  Capitalism and the Rise of Islam.”  From Fox News:

A group committed to establishing an international Islamic empire and reportedly linked to Al Qaeda is stepping up its Western recruitment efforts by holding its first official conference in the U.S.

Hizb ut-Tahrir is a global Sunni network with reported ties to confessed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Al Qaeda in Iraq’s onetime leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. It has operated discreetly in the U.S. for decades.

Now, it is coming out of the shadows and openly hosting a July 19 conference entitled, “The Fall of Capitalism and the Rise of Islam,” at a posh Hilton hotel in a suburb of Chicago.

Read the whole article here.  They may be figuring with Obama in the White House, the fall of Capitalism is near!  The group, Hizb ut-Tahri, needs loads of young people to indoctrinate with the idea that a worldwide Islamic caliphate is the goal.

Then another reader sent me this column of a couple of weeks ago by our friend Diana West about the rise of Geert Wilders in Holland and how the Muslims might just pack up and leave the Netherlands if Wilders’ political views prevail.  Interesting thought, and as my tipster queried — where could we find our own Geert Wilders?

And, the third item in my inbox when I came in just now is a note from Janet with information about a book on how immigration is the Trojan Horse for the spread of Islam around the world.  I don’t know where the following excerpts come from, but these two points were in her e-mail:

“The authors of this book argue that ‘Islamic Immigration’ (Al-Hijra, in Arabic) is tied organically and inseparably to a form of immigration which is an integral part of the Islamic call (da’wa) to establish an Islamic state or political power base and to spread Islam.”

Pages 6-7.

In his endorsement of the book Geert Wilders writes:

“In Al-Hijra, Sam Solomon & E Al Maqdisi give an excellent insider view of how immigration is a bona fide doctrine of Islam, not just a random immigration of people looking for jobs, opportunities, and a better life – and thus is being used, as set in motion by Muhammed, as a vital strategy of conquest. They explain how and why immigration is going under the radar, and how the demands of the growing Muslim communities are transforming our societies.”

Pages 11-12.

The book (at Amazon):  Modern Day Trojan Horse: Al-Hijra, The Islamic Doctrine of Immigration, Accepting Freedom or Imposing Islam?

Addendum: Steve Emerson of the Investigative Project has a report on the Fall of Capitalism conference here. –Judy