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Muslim American Grilled at Border Over Religion
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Alyallen



Joined: 29 Mar 2004
Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!

PostPosted: Tue May 15, 2007 10:10 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

BJWD wrote:
I'm not saying muslims should be excluded from the labour force, or lose the right to vote.

My position is that being a young muslim man is part of the profile of a terrorist. It isn't the only part, but it is an important part.

Taken to the real world.. If a muslim man from saudi signs up for flight school in Arizona and pays in cash, should the FBI give him a good once-over? I would say yes. A big YES, in fact. That is 4 flags right there. This is not unreasonable.

A 60 year old woman named ali isn't likely to fly a plane into a building. She can be treated normally by the border police.


The point I am making is about the actions of the border patrol. Once again, if the guy did something wrong at the border besides having a name change to reflect his religious beliefs, then I wouldn't be in this thread. He has been repeatedly detained despite the fact that he has family across the border and travels with his wife and children. I think it's interesting that they focus on him and not on his wife. I mean why just limit it to men since women have been known to participate in terrorist activity. There was even that bombing with the husband and wife duo....maybe it was in Saudi Arabia or Syria last year perhaps....

I just don't like how this line is being drawn.

Young Muslim man doing something suspicious within the confines of the United States seems like a good reason for the FBI to be called in but some guy crossing the border who was determined to not be a risk shouldn't have to deal with this crap.

All I'm saying is that the border patrol obviously does not have its act together if they continue to waste time on a man who is of no danger to the U.S. government. I mean think about it, how many terrorists go so far as to write a letter to the government requesting to have their name removed from a terrorism or high risk list?

from the article
Quote:
Thank you for your recent letter, in which you expressed your concern regarding difficulties that you have experienced during U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) processing,� she wrote. �We have recently completed our review of this matter. Based on the information you provided and our research into the issues you raise, records have been modified where appropriate.�

Meanwhile, Reed keeps getting hassled.

The third time was in mid-March.....

On April 29, Reed says he was detained again....


If this was taken cared of properly, this would not have been a story for us to debate about. How can I have faith in this system to protect me when they can't even update their records to reflect what is happening in a timely manner? I mean, these inept fools patrol the U.S. border.... Confused
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jinju



Joined: 22 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Tue May 15, 2007 3:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Alyallen wrote:
As I said, personal rant. Quite aware of the quite ridiculous vagueness of racial terms but it's still true. white supremacist Christians would be white....there is no confusion there. Muslims would be ? what exactly?


Muslim. Thats why this MUSLIM was treated the way he was. Nothing to do with his look but the violent sets of ideas he believes in.
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mindmetoo



Joined: 02 Feb 2004

PostPosted: Tue May 15, 2007 3:57 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

BJWD wrote:
My position is that being a young muslim man is part of the profile of a terrorist. It isn't the only part, but it is an important part.


Being a middle aged Christian white guy in Montana is part of the profile of a domestic Christian Identity terrorist. Being a white unemployed hippy in California is part of the profile of being an Earth First terrorist. Being a black guy from LA fits the profile of a gang member. Being an Italian from New York fits the profile of a mafia member. So what? Is an LA citizen more at threat from a gang member or a terrorist? Is a small time judge trying to enforce a lien in Montana more at danger from a terrorist or a radical in the Christian Identity movement?


Last edited by mindmetoo on Tue May 15, 2007 5:21 pm; edited 2 times in total
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ddeubel



Joined: 20 Jul 2005

PostPosted: Tue May 15, 2007 4:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
How can I have faith in this system to protect me when they can't even update their records to reflect what is happening in a timely manner? I mean, these inept fools patrol the U.S. border....


Aly,

I don't think it is just the system and I disagree with saying and qualifying that this is only a "lack of rules and regulations".

This might have been the case prior to 9/11. But unfortunately the path taken by the U.S. government was to instill fear and to promote low level hatred and suspicion of Muslims of all sorts. Terrible strategy and this strategy of "the other" has slowly perculated down to the common folk who go about their day in the usual ways.

These immigration/border officials were not just doing their official duty. They were reflecting a strong, personal anti-Muslim bigotry (probably not even known by these men). Laws are enforced by people and their own biases come very much into play.

I accuse the Bush administration of allowing this to happen. By not promoting reconcilliation, understanding but instead promoting suspicion and gross stereotypes which have just furthered and fuel the intentions of these "terrorists". The skewed news reporting, also so irresponsible, has furthered this without any government program of "dialogue".

Let's face it, there are very few terrorists in the world. Very few. The U.S. govt did not do the mature and thoughtful thing but instead went down the road of revenge and paranoia. Look at the similiar responses to the terror of the late 19th century and in particular in the U.S. after McKinley's assassination. The similiar reaction against "anarchists" whoever they were?????? so many innocent lives destroyed because of suspicion, dress, whisper, at that time. Still going on now, scapegoating.

DD
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Adventurer



Joined: 28 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Tue May 15, 2007 7:00 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ddeubel, I personally view the Bush Administration to be similar to a Middle Eastern government since it uses religion to advance its agenda, and the leader invokes God and religion and then goes to war and claims he has a sanction of a higher being. I have a serious problem with that.
Those who have studied history remember King Phillip of Spain thought God was on his side when he sent the Spanish Armada. The Bush Administration did not do enough (except late in the game) to promote dialogue, work with allies etc.... That was bad business and opposite of his father's style. He has more of his father's style in politics only when his term is over, and he was pressured to do so. It is kind of ironic how the Bush Administration was embarassed by the Dubai Ports issue. They couldn't understand the hysteria against the Arabs as owners. After all they were partially responsible for the environment in which the deal was rejected. I believe Dubai Ports, in the end, got something in the U.S.
Don't quote me on that.

As far as this fellow, the government is showing serious incompetence if they can't take a guy off some dumb list. He may have converted to Islam after marrying his Muslim wife, which is normal, but he is still the man who served his country, not a criminal or terrorist. Recently, a professor was barred from entry, because he wrote a paper in the 1960s
about the use of LSD. This was about 40 years ago, and it was about a friend who quoted him. Some guy at the border made some random internet search and asked Mr. Feldmar if he was the same man mentioned on the internet by that other guy. He said yes and the Canadian professor was barred entry over a paper where he talked about drug use 40 years ago. It is extremely dumb considering almost half the American population has tried an illegal substance at some point.
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thepeel



Joined: 08 Aug 2004

PostPosted: Tue May 15, 2007 7:15 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
They were reflecting a strong, personal anti-Muslim bigotry


If you had any idea about what islam is, and what many muslims actually believe, you would be bigoted of that arrogant, supremacist and homicidal "religion" too.

If neo-nazis were the threat we would focus our attention on neo-nazis. islam is no different. "radical" muslims are qualitatively no different from neo-nazis. They are both supremacist, totalitarian ideologies. "radical" muslims are right-wing extremists.

My rant above is directly related to this topic. The greatest security threat is from radical muslims. So, we must focus our security services upon them. If it were Jesus-freak abortion Dr. killers that were flying planes into buildings and blowing up buses, I'd be railing just as hard against them and I would be advocating keeping crazy jesus types under close watch.
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Alyallen



Joined: 29 Mar 2004
Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!

PostPosted: Tue May 15, 2007 7:31 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

ddeubel wrote:
Quote:
How can I have faith in this system to protect me when they can't even update their records to reflect what is happening in a timely manner? I mean, these inept fools patrol the U.S. border....


Aly,

I don't think it is just the system and I disagree with saying and qualifying that this is only a "lack of rules and regulations".

This might have been the case prior to 9/11. But unfortunately the path taken by the U.S. government was to instill fear and to promote low level hatred and suspicion of Muslims of all sorts. Terrible strategy and this strategy of "the other" has slowly perculated down to the common folk who go about their day in the usual ways.

These immigration/border officials were not just doing their official duty. They were reflecting a strong, personal anti-Muslim bigotry (probably not even known by these men). Laws are enforced by people and their own biases come very much into play.

I accuse the Bush administration of allowing this to happen. By not promoting reconcilliation, understanding but instead promoting suspicion and gross stereotypes which have just furthered and fuel the intentions of these "terrorists". The skewed news reporting, also so irresponsible, has furthered this without any government program of "dialogue".

Let's face it, there are very few terrorists in the world. Very few. The U.S. govt did not do the mature and thoughtful thing but instead went down the road of revenge and paranoia. Look at the similiar responses to the terror of the late 19th century and in particular in the U.S. after McKinley's assassination. The similiar reaction against "anarchists" whoever they were?????? so many innocent lives destroyed because of suspicion, dress, whisper, at that time. Still going on now, scapegoating.

DD


not that I disagree with you but my focus is on the article and the facts that revolve around it. Discussions here on Dave's tend to get bogged down (at least in my opinion) by personal bile while I'd rather keep things limited to the issue at hand (excluding my rant which I clearly labeled as such).

The issue of this article to me comes down to the ineptness of the border patrol in updating their records in a timely manner. There's no need to disenfranchise a Muslim man over a stupid clerical error. How this sort of response frames the Bush administration is irrelevant to me and simply will lead the thread further and further astray....

But of course this is all my personal opinion....
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ddeubel



Joined: 20 Jul 2005

PostPosted: Tue May 15, 2007 9:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
not that I disagree with you but my focus is on the article and the facts that revolve around it. Discussions here on Dave's tend to get bogged down (at least in my opinion) by personal bile while I'd r