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!

Hate Crimes bill is sending all chickens for cover

That is pretty much the gist of the excellent discussion going on at VDARE on S.909 the so-called Hate Crimes bill being pushed by the Obama Administration.  Frankly, I haven’t time to do the topic justice today, but I wanted to get the information out to you because it is moving very fast.

I was especially appalled to see that our MD Senator, Ben Cardin, is one of those helping Obama and Eric Holder shove this down our throats.  Cardin would like federal thought police to override the states’ law enforcement function.    Please read the coverage at VDARE  (lots of links to help you understand this free speech  issue) and contact your Washington representatives, that is, if you can find them.  Reports are that many are off on international junkets.

I have a question.  If this goes through and people with a white European heritage become a minority in a few decades as is predicted, will those folks then become the protected minority?   Actually, here is a better question, if a white Christian was attacked by someone professing to hate Christians (you know, say a Muslim) does the law also apply?   Just wondering.

Further thoughts July 5th:   Will Obama/Holder have a ‘hate scale’ to rank groups that hate, here?

State of Maine attempting to silence Christian group

Maine, the state with a rapidly expanding Muslim population, is threatening Christian Action Network with a fine over what the bureaucrats are calling an inflammatory anti-Muslim message.

Hat tip Jerry Gordon writing in the Iconoclast, here.   See the full article by Patrick Poole at Pajamas Media which begins:

An organization in the national spotlight recently for producing a documentary identifying several dozen potential terrorist training compounds in the U.S. has offended the sensibilities of Maine bureaucrats, who have fined the organization $4,000, alleging among other things that the group sent out mailings containing an “inflammatory anti-Muslim message.”

The group in question, the Christian Action Network (CAN), received notice of the fines and the fundraising ban in a May 6 letter from Elaine Thibodeau of the State of Maine’s Department of Professional and Financial Regulation. Enclosed in the letter was a prepared consent agreement for CAN to sign agreeing to all of the state’s allegations, waiving all rights to appeal, and agreeing to pay the $4,000 fine. As part of the consent agreement, CAN is required to agree to all of the state’s allegations, including their assertion that their mailing amounted to hate speech.

“These bogus charges and fines the State of Maine has imposed are nothing but an attempt to stifle our free speech and silence our organization from speaking out about the steady creep of radical Islam in America,” CAN president Martin Mawyer told Pajamas Media. “We fully intend to appeal the state’s penalties because if they successfully silence us here, we will quickly find that we won’t be able to speak out anywhere.”

Read on!

We told you about the Christian Action Network’s film here and here.  And use our search function and look for “Lewiston” or simply “Maine” to see how heated things have become in Maine as Muslim refugees flock to the state with its extensive welfare system.

This is how the stealth jihad progresses.  The Muslim population expands, and free speech is threatened.  We need only look to Europe to see the strategy.

Florida group suing Marriott hotel for breach of contract

Update June 16th:  Hear participants in the lawsuit interviewed on radio this evening, go here for more information.

Isn’t this interesting.   Remember we told you about the conference in Nashville, TN that I recently attended and how the hotel—Loews Vanderbilt—cancelled the New English Review Conference days before it was to begin.   Now comes news a Marriott hotel in Florida did the same thing to the Florida Security Council and that group is suing the hotel.   Read their press release here, and watch a youtube clip here on the group’s home page.

Tom Trento, in that youtube clip, tells us the Florida Security Council also wants to discover if some one or some group was behind the hotel’s decision to cancel their event and he announced a new program at the FSC.    Entitled the ‘Free Speech Command Center’ it will gather cases across the country where citizens free speech is being stymied by those from a certain political and/or religious ideology.

Geert Wilders’s party makes gains in European elections

Of course, the EU Observer headlines this great news Netherlands embraces far right in EU elections.

The Dutch far-right Freedom Party (PVV) of Geert Wilders made the greatest leap forward in the country’s EU elections on Thursday (4 June), with 16.9 percent in exit polls. But the ruling conservatives came top overall.

The result is a major victory for the openly anti-Islamic party, giving it four seats in the European legislature and a possibility that this could rise to five once the final count is completed.

The “ruling conservatives” are projected to win about 20 percent, or five seats. So there’s not a big gap between the two parties. This gives right-thinking Europeans the vapors.

As the xenophobic party’s celebrations got under way, Mr Wilders said his success was a vote against the current administration and an overly costly EU.

“People have had enough of Europe as it is now – a big Europe with Turkey possibly joining – that we spend billions on each year,” he said according to newswires.

It’s extremist and far-right and xenophobic to object to your country being transformed into something unrecognizable and unlivable because of immigrants who are hostile to the culture that is hosting them. God help them, and preserve America from falling this far. 

The rise of Mr Wilders – who has described the Koran as fascist and who currently receives 24-hour protection following death threats – clearly came at the expense of governing coalition partners.

Fears amongst Protestant and Catholic voters over the country’s roughly 800,000 Muslim inhabitants helped drive the strong support for the Freedom Party, which was contesting its first European elections.

Mr Wilders, who directed a short film that criticizes the Koran as a “fascist book”, urged voters to reject EU involvement in immigration policy and said Turkey should not join the 27-nation union.

“Turkey as [an] Islamic country should never be in the EU, not in 10 years, not in a million years,” Wilders said after voting.

I don’t know what difference this will make in the EU parliament. The EU government is not responsive to its constituents; it seems that bureaucrats rather than the elected officials run it and make the decisions. But I’m no expert. Maybe having some representative from Wilders’s party will at least give his point of view a hearing.