Showing posts with label Hate Group. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hate Group. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

"DIY firm Lowe's in row over Muslim-American reality TV"

DIY firm Lowe's in row over Muslim-American reality TV

The Amen family in a promo picture from TLCThe Amen family of Dearborn includes a fiance who is converting from Catholicism

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Home improvement retailer Lowe's is facing criticism after removing advertising from a reality TV show showcasing American Muslims.
The company pulled ads from All-American Muslim after complaints from the Florida Family Association.
The cable TV show portrays the lives of five families in Dearborn, Michigan, a city known for its Muslim and Arab population.
Lowe's issued an apology, but did not say it would re-advertise on the show.
The North Carolina-based company said in a statement it apologised for having "managed to make some people very unhappy".
"It appears that we managed to step into a hotly contested debate with strong views from virtually every angle and perspective," the firm said.
"As a result we did pull our advertising on this program. We believe it is best to respectfully defer to communities, individuals and groups to discuss and consider such issues of importance."
In a statement on its website, the Florida Family Association called All-American Muslim "propaganda that riskily hides the Islamic agenda's clear and present danger to American liberties and traditional values".
The association asked members to send emails to companies that ran advertisements during the show.
According to the association, adverts from many other firms are no longer appearing during the programme. However, while many firms buy adverts to run at any time, Lowe's said it pulled adverts bought specifically for broadcast during All-American Muslim.

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I'm saddened that any place of business would succumb to bigots and people trying to perpetuate their negative views on an entire community”
Suehaila AmenAll-American Muslim participant
The Learning Channel, which broadcasts the programme, features several reality shows focusing on the everyday lives of subjects viewed by many as controversial or outside the mainstream.
They include a polygamist family in Sister Wives, and the Duggars, a conservative Christian family with 19 children on 19 and Counting.
The channel describes All-American Muslim as "a powerful series that goes inside the rarely-seen world of American Muslims to uncover a unique community struggling to balance faith and nationality in a post 9/11 world".
'Extreme disappointment'
Keith Ellison, one of only two Muslim congressmen, said withdrawing the advertisements was "disappointing".
"The success of All-American Muslim shows how ready the country is to learn about Muslims as Americans," he said in a statement.
"This probably makes hate-mongers uncomfortable - as they should be," Mr Ellison, a Democrat who site in the House of Representatives for a Minnesota district.
Mr Ellison was among those who signed a petition calling on Lowe's and other advertisers to resist calls to step aside from opponents of the show.
Suehaila Amen, whose family is featured on All-American Muslim, told the Detroit News on Sunday she was disappointed by the retailer's decision.
"I'm saddened that any place of business would succumb to bigots and people trying to perpetuate their negative views on an entire community," she said.
Ted Lieu, a Democratic state senator from California, said he was considering calling for a boycott of Lowe's, a pledge already made by Twitter users using the hashtag #boycottlowes.
"The show is about what it's like to be a Muslim in America, and it touches on the discrimination they sometimes face. And that kind of discrimination is exactly what's happening here with Lowe's," Mr Lieu said.
The Michigan director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, Dawud Walid, said his group felt "extreme disappointment" but was working on resolving the situation with the help of non-Muslim allies.
"I will be picking up the phone tomorrow to some of our friends and allies to explain the situation to them," Mr Walid said on Sunday.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Charges Against Men Police Link to Hate Group - News1130

Charges against men police link to hate group - News1130



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(DAVE WHITE, NEWS1130 PHOTO)
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Charges against men police link to hate group

One man's accused of setting someone on fire

Dave White Dec 09, 2011 11:17:42 AM
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VANCOUVER (NEWS1130) - Police are linking two men from the Lower Mainland to an international organized hate group called 'Blood and Honour,' which is responsible for racially motivated attacks around the world.

The men are accused in crimes against four local victims.

After an horrific attack in February, Detective Constable Terry Wilson with the BC Hate Crime Team says 25-year-old Robertson de Chazal has now been charged with aggravated assault.

"[He allegedly set] a Filipino man on fire. The 25 year old victim fell asleep on a discarded couch near the intersection of Commercial Drive and 5th Avenue in Vancouver," he says. "Mr. de Chazal and two other men were observed by witnesses allegedly lighting the victim on fire. The suspects allegedly fled the scene before arrival. The victim sustained injuries to his arms, face, and neck."

A second man has been arrested in connection with this incident but hasn't yet been charged and therefore can't be identified.

de Chazal is also charged with assaulting a black man in September, 2009, knocking him unconscious

Meanwhile, 25-year-old Shawn MacDonald is accused in assaults dating back to 2008 on a black man, an hispanic man, and an aboriginal woman.

MacDonald and de Chazal have been released on conditions.

Showing off a table covered in flags and t-shirts covered in swastikas, Wilson says it's not illegal to be part of an organized hate group.

"It's not illegal to belong to these groups. It's not illegal to have the paraphernalia you see here," he says. "But if these beliefs motivate you to commit criminal offences, that's when we become involved. When they become criminal offences, that's when we look at the motivation."

He says that motivation through membership can be used against an accused in court to label their offence a hate crime.

"If you belong to an organized hate group in BC we will know about you and if you commit crimes we will come and get you," warns Wilson.

None of the allegations against de Chazal or MacDonald have been proven in court.

Toronto's Dr. Abbee Corb is a global expert in white supremacy and radicalization. She says people should not be surprised these types of attacks happen in Canada.
While she says it's difficult for any expert to track down numbers, Corb points out these types of groups can be found across the country.

She says most hate crimes are committed by individuals with their own beliefs or who often have their beliefs fueled by groups posting material online.

"Hate crimes are very, very under-reported across Canada. People are afraid, at times, to reach out, because the hate crime doesn't just affect the person, it affects the community."

Corb says organized hate groups are very careful and know legal loopholes to make sure they get away with actions supporting their cause.

Meanwhile, Wilson says the local sect of 'Blood and Honour' is not connected to a white supremacist march that was planned but cancelled in Downtown Vancouver earlier this year.
He says there are up to 15 members of the group in this province that police are aware of.
There's another group in B.C. he says his team often investigates but is refusing to name it.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Video: Leading Islamophobe Publishes New Anti-Islam Book (CAIR)

"In her new book titled "Stop the Islamization of America: A Practical Guide to the Resistance," self-proclaimed human rights activist Pamela Geller discusses what she says are ways in which the United States is under attack by "Islamic supremacists" and "Shari'ah".

Geller is Executive Director of Stop Islamization of America which is considered by many civil and rights organizations as Islamophobic and listed as a hate group, including by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

The book, which is scheduled to be released September 6, discusses ways in which the U.S. is being Islamized without Americans' knowledge such as the Justice Department's so-called fight in favor of Sharia law and the possibility of buying halal meat in grocery stores without knowing it.

One organization that comes under direct attack by Geller in her new book is the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which she states, like many other American Muslim groups, is linked to the Muslim Brotherhood.

But CAIR spokesperson Ibrahim Hooper states Geller's rhetoric is intolerant and hateful, much like the Norway bomber who mentioned Geller in his manifesto as a "decent human being".

Hooper also discussed the possible impact literature like Geller's book may have on the general public."

Salam Alaikum