You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
-Short Attention Span Theater-
BIGOTRY’S STING LINKS BLACKS, IMMIGRANTS
2004-01-20
Mary Mogan Edwards
Today’s celebrations of Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy might make the civil-rights movement of the 1960s seem like a matter of history, but people caught in a modern-day struggle feel a connection to those who looked to King for leadership 40 years ago. They are people routinely held up by airport authorities, glared at by strangers or rejected by employers, in part because they are Muslim, foreign or look like one or both. And they have a new respect for black Americans’ complaints of racism...
Y'know, formerly I could look at a Muslim and just see a person. Then Osama bin Laden declared war on us and killed almost 3000 of us in New York and Washington. Now, no matter how multicultural I might want to be, I see Muslims in a new light. And it might be a bad thing. I'm sure the nice Somali lady who works at the convenience store has no intention of doing terrible things. I'm sure that the Moroccan guy on the third floor at work is nothing but a competent programmer. I'm sure the Arabian guy who's the mechanic at the Shell station's just another hard-working American. But I'm not totally sure anymore. It was't Norwegians who hijacked the planes. It wasn't Lutherans who crashed them into the Twin Towers.
Arab-Americans and others with perceived Middle Eastern ties "are finding out what it feels like to face racial profiling," said U.S. Rep. Jesse L. Jackson Jr., who spoke Thursday as part of Ohio State University’s observance of the King holiday. Jackson, an Illinois Democrat, is a son of the Rev. Jesse Jackson, a civil-rights leader.
He's the legitimate scion, right?
King would have found common cause with today’s targets of anti-Muslim bigotry, the younger Jackson said.
Always assuming he hadn't been flying out of Boston on September 11th, 2001, of course...
He added, however, that King would have expanded the issue — as he did with black civil rights — to one of broader moral significance for all Americans. "He would have made the case that unborn and uncounted Americans will reap the hostility of the whole world, brought on by these policies," Jackson said.
How about the dead Americans, Jesse Jr.? What do they reap?
Christine Ballengee-Morris, the director of Ohio State’s Multicultural Center, spent the 2002-03 academic year talking with students about how different cultural groups in America are getting along in the era of homeland security and the Patriot Act. Ballengee-Morris has seen black students and Muslims looking at one another in a new light...
You mean she's seen the black guys looking at the guys with turbans and wondering if the guys with turbans were going to explode? I can understand that.
Muslims and Arabs in America are more likely now to join blacks in the continuing push for equality, said Asma Mobin-Uddin, vice president of the Ohio chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations. "We are more aware of it now because we have become the potential victims," she said. Some "feel bad that we weren’t more active before. We might have seen discrimination, we might have been outraged by it, but we might not have been moved to take extra steps against it."
But not moved enough to take strong action against the guys with the automatic weapons. How many has CAIR turned in? I think the numbers approximately... ummm... zero.
An alliance between the black and immigrant communities would please lawyer Byron Potts, who would stand to make a lot of money from class action suits has represented blacks in civil-rights cases. "I think it should bridge the gap (between the groups)," he said. "Historically, when people come over here, they try to distance themselves from African-Americans. They know how African-Americans are treated." Blacks should return the empathy to immigrants and Arab-Americans, he said, because the struggle that King led continues. "We’re still on the list," he said of blacks. "We need to form an
allegiance and become partners."
Sounds like our enemy is looking for potential allies. Divide and conquer and all that stuff. But it wasn't blacks who flew the planes into the buildings, either.

I remind all posters that articles should be either hard news or commentary that expands our understanding on the mechanism and goals of terrorism.

Please edit all postings for length. Cut the parts that repeat what everybody knows by now because we've seen it so many times before. Try and keep them short and punchy. People try to read this stuff, y'know.

I will delete pure opinion pieces and such purely political hit pieces that bore me. This is because Rantburg concerns itself with the War on Terror. If you want to post Bush hit pieces, go to Indymedia. If you disagree with what Bush does, kindly confine yourself to the comments portion of real articles and take your lumps.

Please do not feed the trolls! I end up leaving troll pieces with a lot of comments because the comments are funnier than the posted article.

If you're a troll, please don't post and then comment on your post under another name. It's tacky.

Thank you,
The Management

Posted by:Cheddarhead

#11  Ass kick'n Rantburg. I could use some proactive love. Group hug!!
Posted by: Lucky   2004-1-21 12:07:11 AM  

#10  I was watching FOX the other day and they interviewed some person who was advocating 'Post Slavery Stress Disorder' which was of course a disorder for the descendant of slaves. I think this person wanted some federal funds or something to 'treat' this illness.

I find it remarkable that Jesse Jackson, and his associates are supporting a organization which condones and encourages slavery...... how Ironic.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2004-1-20 11:36:15 PM  

#9  BAR -- The Ohio chapter of CAIR was, I believe, part of the effort that shut down a local play that was so ass-kissingly approving of Palestinian terrorism it was a parody. Apparently they objected to the portrayal of a Palestinian teenage girl in terms that a US audience would associate with teenage girls: worried about boys, clothes, music, etc.

CAIR is an Islamist group, and the local nutjobs are no exception.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2004-1-20 8:08:40 PM  

#8  All right, who's this "TS" idiot, and why is he dragging me into this idiocy? Yes, I'm aware of the slavery in Sudan. I'm also aware that, although Saudi Arabia has said they've ended slavery, there are still some really peculiar things going on in Riyadh, mostly in "palaces". I'm also aware of slavery in Burma, parts of India, Indonesia, and a few other unsavory places, including some really nasty crap going on in Paraguay and parts of Brazil. I also know that Islam not only condones slavery, but promotes it.

My name's on the long list of volunteers willing to go to Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Syria, Jordan, Egypt, and a few dozen other places to help clean out these pestholes of their "Islamic" clerics, rulers, and just plain ass-hats. It's time to flush the whole damned thing back into the Arabian Sea, and let it sink.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2004-1-20 8:06:06 PM  

#7  And they have a new respect for black Americans’ complaints of racism...

Probably because they now understand that the system can be milked by crying racism, regardless of whether there's a valid claim of actual racism or not. All it takes is someone being overly concerned with being PC......

Arab-Americans and others with perceived Middle Eastern ties "are finding out what it feels like to face racial profiling," said U.S. Rep. Jesse L. Jackson Jr., who spoke Thursday as part of Ohio State University’s observance of the King holiday.

Sigh. Like father, like son. Jesse Jr. carries on the same shameful legacy of Victimhood&trade. So when dealing with Islamic terrorists, where is one supposed to look? In Finland? Please.

As the old saying goes: "The race is not always to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, but that's the way to bet."

Muslims and Arabs in America are more likely now to join blacks in the continuing push for equality, said Asma Mobin-Uddin, vice president of the Ohio chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

WTF is this guy talking about?

"We’re still on the list," he said of blacks.

All these eternal-victim types need to get over it.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2004-1-20 5:54:38 PM  

#6  Yeah...well I'm held up in airports too, hours every single time I fly. I also am exposed to suspicious looks from TSA officials and they confiscate my personal belongings, should I forget and leave a nail clipper or pocket knife in my bag.

So whine and cry all you want. But don't look for any sympathy from me. This victim schtick is old, tired and not just working any more. Deal with it.
Posted by: B   2004-1-20 4:40:51 PM  

#5  The funny thing here is that the Arab word for black person is the same as the word for slave. How's that for Arab sensitivity?
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2004-1-20 4:35:05 PM  

#4  OP, are you aware of the modern day slavery in Sudan?
Probably not.
As you really could care less as it doesn't fit your political agenda right?
Posted by: TS   2004-1-20 4:03:30 PM  

#3  En-slavers and slaves a natural alliance.
This is the competition?
Posted by: Shipman   2004-1-20 3:42:46 PM  

#2  Cry me a river. It isn't the blacks, orientals, indians, or hispanics who are blowing themselves up, smuggling explosives onto airplanes, or flying jets into skyscrapers. As far as I'm concerned, go ahead and search every ME passport holder's bags and refuse entry into the country to anyone from the region.
Posted by: Unmutual   2004-1-20 3:42:17 PM  

#1  boo frickin' hoo. Don't like profiling at airports? Wait til you see what it's like if 15 Saudis fly another jet into an American institution. Profiling will be the least of your worries
Posted by: Frank G   2004-1-20 3:24:10 PM  

00:00