“Never Again” Requires Consistency On Equality and Liberty

April 21, 2009 will mark this year’s Holocaust Remembrance Day (Yom Hashoah), where many around the world will pause and reflect on the tragedy of the Holocaust. At the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington DC, there will be an annual names reading ceremony and “the Museum will lead the nation in commemorating the six million Jews who were murdered in the Holocaust, as well as the millions of other victims of Nazi persecution.”

As the museum states, the “Holocaust was the state-sponsored, systematic persecution and annihilation of European Jewry by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between 1933 and 1945. Jews were the primary victims — six million were murdered; Gypsies, the handicapped, and Poles were also targeted for destruction or decimation for racial, ethnic, or national reasons. Millions more, including homosexuals, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Soviet prisoners of war and political dissidents, also suffered grievous oppression and death under Nazi tyranny.”

We come to this Holocaust Remembrance Day, mindful of the growing darkness of hatred and intolerance around the world. As many solemnly remember April 21 as Holocaust Remembrance Day, we realize that there are those disturbed individuals who celebrate April 20 as Adolf Hitler’s birthday, including Daniel Cowart, who celebrated last April 20 with his fellow Neo-Nazis in America prior to his arrest in October for a terrorist plot to murder Barack Obama and 88 black Americans.

We are mindful that the campaign of hate by Nazis continues today in America, Canada, Germany, the United Kingdom, Australia, and around the world, and this campaign of hate continues by Nazis against Jews, blacks, and others who do not accept the Nazi vision of hate and intolerance towards humanity. We have seen recent Nazi activity in America in St. Louis, Idaho, Utah, Colorado, Nebraska, and Maine; we have recently been informed of 196 known Nazi groups in America.  The infamous Nazi web site StormFront was reportedly frequented by a killer of police officers in Pittsburgh.  Reports have recently described the growth of Nazism again in Germany, with new German Nazis seeking the creation of a “Fourth Reich,” and who reportedly “relish the idea of a new Holocaust against the Jews.” Furthermore, as we recognize Holocaust Remembrance Day, we see one of the most notorious Holocaust deniers in the world – Iran’s President Ahmadinejad speaking at a United Nations-sponsored conference on racism.  As some celebrated Hitler’s birthday on April 20, Ahmadinejad told this conference that the Holocaust was a “pretext” for aggression… and received applause.

On Holocaust Remembrance Day, the question we must ask ourselves is what has continued to empower this worldwide movement of Nazis, Holocaust deniers, and Holocaust revisionists?

The simple answer is hate. But it is not just any hate – it is an organized, institutionalized, hate based on supremacist ideologies. We must recognize that our defiance against Nazism is a defiance against organized hate and supremacism itself. Therefore, if we are serious about our vow of “Never Again,” then we must recognize the enemy not only as Nazism, but also as the organized hate and supremacist thinking that is the basis for Nazism and its ilk – both in the days of Adolf Hitler and sadly even in this 21st century today.

If the problem is hate, then we must conclude that the answer is love.  No matter how horrific, offensive, and disgusting such evil may be, we must not lower ourselves and our standards to matching hate with hate.  More hate will not and can not even begin to address this challenge of hate.  We must prove that our love of humanity is greater than their hatred of humanity.   Let us never question that their organized hatred is anything less than a hatred of humanity itself, because their supremacism hates the truth that all men and women are created equal.  Their supremacism hates the universal human rights of equality and liberty for all humanity.  Their hatred of these truths and these rights are a rejection of humanity itself.  We cannot fail to take such existential anti-humanity threats lightly, and therefore we must take serious, consistent measures against these threats.

As Nazis and other supremacists use hate in an organized, institutional way, so we too must use love in an organized, institutional way.  Our approach to fulfilling our vow “Never Again” must not be treated in a random, disorganized fashion.  Our love must be based on something real and tangible, something that other human beings can measure and gauge as evidence of our commitment.  To prove that our love is stronger than their hate, it is necessary for us and our governments to make a renewed commitment to being consistently responsible for equality and liberty.  Our responsibility for equality and liberty is our sign of love and respect for our fellow human beings.  You can’t love humanity and deny it equality.   You can’t love humanity and deny it liberty.  You can’t love humanity and deny it freedom.  You can’t love humanity and ignore it when others seek to deny people their fundamental rights as human beings. We hold these truths as self-evident, and it is this declaration of love and respect to all of humanity that America and our universal human rights are based upon.

Our declaration of love for humanity must be the fundamental basis for our decisions individually, as nations, and as human beings.  “Never Again” begins with our choice as individuals and as nations to love, not hate.  “Never Again” requires a consistent commitment to this declaration that “Love Wins” through the universal human rights of equality and liberty.  This is hard work.  It requires very painful and difficult decisions.  Such a commitment will require great sacrifices in implementing.  But such a consistent implementation of our love to humanity is necessary.  We cannot choose to “pick our battles” on defending universal human rights.  Whether it is Nazis in Germany or America, racial supremacists, religious extremists, Communist totalitarians, or others who would defy humanity’s universal rights, we must take a stand — even when we don’t have the resources, even when it is not in our financial interests, and even when it will make us unpopular and rejected.

A vow of “Never Again” also requires understanding that human freedom is everyone’s responsibility.  The tactics and the debate over right-left political issues has become so obsessive that the larger understanding of the threat to our human freedoms is lost.  We saw this recently with the reports by tacticians in the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.  Such tacticians have recently defined “right-wing” threats in a follow-up April 2009 report to “left-wing” threats in a January 2009 report.  The tactician view of tracking “right” or “left” threats, instead of being consistently responsible for equality and liberty in our policies and decisions as a nation, gives our nation’s leaders a false sense of accomplishment.  This is not stating that we do not have threats in America, as there are threats around the world.  But our focus must be on those who would deny freedom for humanity.  Moreover, the right-left perspective fails to even understand the real threats.  Nazis and racial supremacists are not merely “right-wing;” they represent enemies of human freedom.  Communist totalitarians and Anarchist nihilists are not merely “left-wing;” they again are enemies of human freedom and the values of equality and liberty.  We keep debating the wrong issues.  As we face global enemies who stand united against human freedom, liberty, and equality, the real issue that we must debate is who stands for human rights and who stands for the love of humanity.  To succeed, we need to spend more time on ideas, and less time on tactics.  We must stop trying to win a struggle of ideas by a cacophony of disconnected tactics.

A vow of “Never Again” also requires integrity.  It requires being conscientious about rejecting Holocaust denial and rejecting Holocaust revisionist views whenever and wherever they are presented.  To those who have supported Holocaust denier Ahmadinejad’s views, we must identify them and hold them accountable.  To those organizations and individuals that promote Holocaust denial and revision, we must identify them and hold them accountable.  This does not mean that we match their hate with hatred of our own.  But what it does require is that we firmly communicate that we will not accept such mocking of the tragedy of the Holocaust, and it means taking those measures that demonstrate our seriousness as people committed to human rights.   This includes any organization that seeks “revisionist” views of any of the Holocaust victims, including “revisionist” views of its homosexual victims.

A vow of “Never Again” also requires courage.  We must fear no evil.  We cannot extend our love of humanity while we live in fear.  Nor we can expect fear to be a motivator of love.  There are those who believe that free people have yet to respond to those who defy such freedoms, because such free people fail to have sufficient fear of the threat.   They believe that another terrorist attack on America will somehow motivate Americans to “do something” about the enemies of freedom.   Yet here we are, in the 21st century, still fighting Adolf Hitler’s Nazism from over 60 years ago.  Here we are, in the 21st century, still fighting Holocaust denial and revisionism. And we wonder why the 9/11 attacks were not sufficient motivation for many to fight for freedom.  And we wonder why nearly eight years after the 9/11 attacks, we still have 9/11 deniers and revisionists.  The fear of evil will never be enough to lead humanity to defend freedom.  In our vow of “Never Again,” we must learn from history and learn from human experience.  We will not defeat the enemies of freedom with either hate or fear.  We must have the understanding, we must have the integrity, and we must have the courage to defy hate with love.

Finally, a vow of “Never Again” requires vision.  It requires the vision to navigate the course of human history by the bright stars of freedom, equality, and liberty, even in the darkest night.  It is the darkest nights which truly illuminate the stars of freedom that our humanity may have once taken for granted.  It requires the vision to see that the many who stand silently for human dignity, such as the thousands who turned out for the opening of the new Skokie Holocaust Museum in Illinois, far outnumber the Nazi activists and hate mongers who seek to grab every headline.  When faced with the existential enemies against freedom, it requires vision, to realize that our greatest strength and our greatest defense lies in our love for humanity, and our commitment to be responsible for equality and liberty.

It requires vision to realize that ultimately Love Wins.

One World

What world do you live in? This should be a simple question for anyone to answer – Earth. But some have fallen into using the language of policy wonks that the world actually has multiple “worlds” within it. For example, you continually hear references to “the Muslim world,” including President Obama’s recent comments to the press. What is exactly is a “Muslim world,” and why would we accept segregation of part of world to only belong to one identity group?

If government leaders, policy makers, and the press started referring to “the white world,” “the black world,” “the Christian world,” etc., wouldn’t we be asking them “what are you talking about”? But the segregationist concept of a so-called “Muslim world” is so ingrained and accepted within foreign policy dialogue that we continue to see the use of this phrase. This includes people that know better. I was recently asked about a challenge in the “Muslim world.” As I stated then, our biggest problem with extremism as an ideology is the idea that we would ever accept a segregationist concept as a “Muslim world.”

How can we be responsible for equality and liberty as universal human rights, but on the other hand give credence to the idea that part of our shared Earth should be segregated as a so-called “Muslim world”? Or any other type of “world,” other than one world — our shared Earth?

Presumably what such people mean to say is that they are referring to areas that are predominantly populated by individuals that follow some form of Islam. As you can see, it is much quicker to simply say “Muslim world.”

But such expediency in terminology is really wrong. Imagine us fighting 1960s segregation in America by being willing to accept the concept that there should be a “white America” versus a “black America.” Just like we are a United States of America, we also have just one world.

The idea that there is a “Muslim world” sets expectations that segregation in the 21st century is somehow acceptable. It sets expectations that our universal truths of human equality and liberty can somehow be only partially accepted to accommodate so-called “local cultures.” In our global dialogue and policies, we simply cannot accept setting expectations that we accept segregation of the world or that we accept anything less than the universality of human equality and liberty.

In 2007, then Senator Barack Obama defined the enemy to freedom. In addressing “the war we need to win,” he stated that America’s enemies “seek to create a repressive caliphate. To defeat this enemy, we must understand who we are fighting against, and what we are fighting for.” However, it is precisely the concept of a “Muslim world” that those who “seek to create a repressive caliphate” are fighting for. There is only one world, not a world that can be segregated into a “Muslim world.” So when President Obama tells the press of the need for “partnership with the Muslim world,” he needs to go back and think about how we accept a segregation of a so-called “Muslim world,” while challenging those who seek to create a caliphate (which he has identified as our enemies).

As Barack Obama has also told us, we also “must understand… what we are fighting for.” We are fighting for more than tactics, more than maneuvers, and more than individual theaters of battle. If we are not fighting for the universal human rights of equality and liberty as our first priority, then we better step back and ask what indeed we are fighting for.

The universal human rights of equality and liberty are not an attempt at political “hegemony,” and they are not an attempt to control others. There are many who find the idea of freedom to be terribly inconvenient to their “local cultures.” But freedom is not merely about convenience, freedom is not merely about popularity, freedom is not merely about adapting, and the right to human freedom is not merely your or my opinion. The freedoms of human equality and liberty are a universal truth of human rights.

These truths are declared as fundamental to our identity as human beings – no matter who we are, where we live, and what we do. Our government leaders must never forget these basic truths on human rights.

On April 4, 2009, President Obama was asked about an extremist law signed by President Karzai in Afghanistan that would legalize rape and oppression of Muslim women. President Obama stated that “we think that it is very important for us to be sensitive to local culture, but we also think that there are certain basic principles that all nations should uphold, and respect for women and respect for their freedom and integrity is an important principle.”  (emphasis added)

Universal truths of human rights are universal. If America ever starts believing that we can be “sensitive to local culture(s)” that legalize any attack on the universal truths of human equality and liberty, then we no longer accept such universal truths of human equality and liberty. We must start by rejecting the very concept of a segregated “Muslim world.”  Moreover, our responsibility for equality and liberty to all human beings, including Muslim women, must never be hesitant, halting, or situational.

We don’t THINK that there are “basic principles that all nations should uphold,” we KNOW that the universal truths of human equality and liberty apply everywhere and to every culture. That is what “universal” means. That is what “truths” mean.  We don’t think all nations SHOULD uphold these rights, we believe it is the RIGHT of every individual in the world to human equality and liberty.

Such truths are not just a good idea, and they are not just malleable opinions dependent on “local cultures.” We have only one world. We have only one humanity. All of humanity in our shared Earth has the human rights of equality and liberty. This is not a question. This is not an opinion. This is not just what we “think,” whether we are an average citizen or we are a president.

We hold these truths to be self-evident.

What to Do About Racial Supremacism – LOVE WINS

To find the answer to the challenge of racial supremacism….

We have to find those who are really responsible.

We have to find those who are allowing racial supremacism to grow.

We have to find those who are allowing hate to fester in America.

Most people think this problem of racial supremacism is about these hate groups.
Most people think that this problem is about those whose hearts have been so hardened by hate that they still believe that there is a white America and a black America, not a UNITED STATES of America.

But I think you know better than that.

This challenge of supremacism and injustice is not just about them.

It is mostly about us.

That means we have to take a good look in the mirror at ourselves.

Those who openly and publicly promote hate and injustice, those who openly and publicly attack liberty and equality — they do so – because they believe they live in a nation – where this is something that this is still something that is acceptable.

But most of all — they do so – because they believe they live in a nation that does not prioritize justice — and — they do so – because they believe that they live in a nation that does not prioritize the universal human rights of equality and liberty.

They do so because they believe they live in a nation where love is not the greatest force for change.

They do so because they believe they live in a nation where might means right.

What does that say about who WE are as a people?
What does that say about who WE are as a nation?
What does that say about OUR failure to be responsible for equality and liberty in our own lives?

When we pray for them to turn their hearts from hatred, we must not be so arrogant to ignore that we need to pray for ourselves to remove the hatred from ours.

We must never match hate with hate.

And we must never believe that ignoring the suffering of our brothers and sisters in humanity is any type of love.

When we pray for them to turn minds from injustice, we must not be so arrogant as to ignore our failure as a nation to be consistently responsible for equality and liberty

We must not be so proud that we are not honest with ourselves.
— About our failure to face the segregated areas of hate growing around our nation
— About our failure to face the dark alleys of racism that have been allowed to fester

We must not be so proud that we don’t acknowledge that when we have left those who promote racial supremacism and hate ALONE – that we have abandoned our troubled brothers and sisters in humanity.

When we tell supremacists that we don’t accept their hate, we don’t accept their supremacism, because we support humanity – we must truly ask ourselves – DO we?

When we tell supremacists at work, in public, and even in our own families that we reject their message, we reject their hate, we stand for humanity’s universal rights – are we really defending human rights if WE as a NATION are not responsible for equality for liberty, and if we as a nation are not responsible those suffering from injustice?

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.”

So when we pray for those who support hate and supremacism, we must pray for ourselves and for renewed strength to do the right thing, the responsible thing, the human thing.

There are many in the world who think that muscle and power will solve all of our problems.  That force and violence will change the world.  That anger and hate have the power to reshape humanity.  But those of us truly responsible for equality and liberty reject this.

You may have noticed, when someone comes to talk with a gun in their hands, no one is listening anymore.

Now we need our law enforcement, and we need our military.  But if you think people are thinking about the universal human rights about equality and liberty when we are at talking about human beings that have guns in their hands — you’re kidding yourself.

So those of us WITHOUT a gun in our hands, need to take the responsibility to speak about our human rights, to speak about equality and to speak about liberty.

Because we are the FIRST LINE of a moral defense for equality and liberty, and we need to tell those who don’t want to hear what we have to say — that equality and liberty are universal human rights for ALL people, and that we are ALL brothers and sisters in humanity.

Because while hate and violence may have the upper hand for a while…
… ultimately in the end Love Wins.

So when we are responsible for equality and liberty, we have to decide which side we are on – the side the ultimately loses – or the side that ultimately wins.

We need protection.  We need those who are oppressed defended from those would oppress them.   We need law and order.

But without equality, without liberty, and without love – we will never have protection, we will never stop oppression, we will never have justice, and we will never have peace.

We need to find a new path to make our nation consistent and accountable in justice.  We need to find a new path to make ourselves as individuals responsible for equality and liberty as a priority in our lives.  We need to find a new path to show to other Americans and to the world – that for those responsible for equality and liberty – will always reject hate.  We need to find a new path to show each other and the world – that ultimately – LOVE ALWAYS WINS.

Our song of love for all of humanity must be greater than the whispers of hate, greater than the mutterings of hate, greater than the demonstrations of hate, and greater than hate shouting from the rooftops.  Our song of love for all of humanity must sing of the universal bond we have as brothers and sisters – louder and greater than any differences, any divisions, and greater than any hate.

We will prioritize equality and liberty as a people, when we accept a determination to love humanity.

Because when you love your brothers and sisters in humanity, to accept anything less than our universal human rights of equality and liberty for ALL of our brothers and sisters in humanity — will be a constant weight on the those who love one another.

But we will never prioritize equality and liberty, if we tolerate a callous disregard for lives, for the dreams, and for the hopes of our fellow human beings.
We will never prioritize equality and liberty, if we fail to love one another, if we fail to even love the very enemies of humanity itself, then we will be failing to be responsible for equality and liberty.

And today, this generation needs to accept its destiny as one that will be responsible for equality and liberty.

So I ask you today, as those who accept the universal human rights of equality and liberty – to begin marching down a new path —  to begin standing for a new cause.

I ask you to show each other and the world a simple, global message:

Love Wins.

900 Reasons to Defy Racial Supremacism – But You Only Need One

On Saturday, April 4, I will be speaking in Washington DC at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool Steps from 4 to 6 PM. I will be addressing the rise of racial supremacism in America and what we must do about it as a free people. I will be asking Americans to be counted in defiance against racial supremacism by signing our petition. I will be asking Americans to join me in prayer at 6 PM to pray for those whose hearts are hardened by hate and who minds reject our universal human rights of equality and liberty.

April 4 is the day that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated at 6 PM in Tennessee in 1968. We honor Dr. King in many ways today. But we must remember that he gave his life so that we as a nation could gain the courage of our convictions as free men and women today. We must also remember that he gave his life so that the words “all men are created equal” were not just on paper and not just in our memorials, but were a part of how we live as Americans and as free people. On April 4, I ask you to take a moment at 6 PM, wherever you are, whatever you are doing, to say a word of thanks, and to say a prayer for those who have yet to learn this lesson in humanity. On April 4, I ask you to live your life being responsible for equality and liberty, so that Dr. King’s sacrifice will never be in vain.

This April, also in Tennessee, we will see the court appearance of two white supremacists who had stated that they sought to murder 88 black Americans and to murder Barack Obama. These two accused white supremacists in Tennessee, Daniel Cowart and Paul Schlesselman, showed their hate in October by shooting at a church in Tennessee, simply because black Americans worshipped there. A year ago last April, Daniel Cowart joined his white supremacist Nazi friends in a birthday party for their idol, Adolf Hitler. Like many racial supremacists, these two met via hate groups on the Internet. Daniel Cowart was a member of that “veritable supermarket of online hate,” the white supremacist Nazi StormFront group. Such hate groups and racial supremacist groups are growing in America today, and it is time that we publicly reject them.

There are some in America who are angry simply because a black American man became president. They want to bring back the days when such a thing was just a dream. Now many of us have differences on politics. We have differences on policies. We have differences on the right approach to take America and the world in the future. As a democratic nation, we need to work out those differences – together.

But the people I am talking about today don’t merely have a difference in politics. They don’t merely have a difference on policies or programs. They have a difference on the meaning of what it means to be a human being. They have a difference on the very idea that “all men are created equal.” But to those who still think that “all men are created equal” is a question, I have news for those people. “All men are created equal” is not a question. It is a declaration.

Our shared human rights of equality and liberty are universal, not just for all Americans, but for all humanity. Those who attack others because of their race don’t just attack that race – they attack all of humanity. Their racial slurs are slurs against all people. Their defacing of property is defacing of all our homes. Their racial hate is hatred against all of humanity.

You can’t hide behind your race and believe that this growth of racial supremacism is not your problem. As we will also see this April in a trial in New Orleans, a white supremacist Ku Klux Klan leader Raymond Foster will be on trial, not for killing a black woman, but for killing a white woman who was recruited to join the Ku Klux Klan and who changed her mind. The penalty for rejecting such white supremacism by the Ku Klux Klan was DEATH – even if you are white.

Hate is color-blind. Supremacism is color-blind. We must consistently reject hate, we must consistently reject supremacism, because hate and supremacism consistently rejects humanity itself.

I have supported black American politicians in the past, and I know about the hate that I have seen from others for doing so. I have had a brick thrown through my car window for daring to publicly support a black American for elected office. They didn’t ask me what my race was before they threw that brick. They didn’t care about my race when they showed me hate in person. Hate is color-blind. Even in this 21st century America, such racial hate and supremacism still exists, and now it is beginning to grow.

As the Southern Poverty Law Center has reported, there are 926 hate groups it has found in America today. Those are 900 good reasons to defy racial supremacism. I ask you to take a moment to look at this map of hate groups. It is an important visual to see with your own eyes to grasp the magnitude of the racial supremacist problem before us today. You will the many white supremacist Ku Klux Klan groups, the many Nazi groups, the many black supremacist groups, and others. This growth of racial supremacism is a national disease and a national disgrace.

I have a copy of this map of these 900 hate groups on my wall to remind myself that the terrorist problem we face is not only just one kind – it is a supremacist kind of every type. While we are well aware of terrorist plots of other kinds against America, many forget the racial supremacist plots of violence and terrorism. Many forget the goals of white supremacists to build a cyanide bomb to use on the American homeland. Many forget Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh’s links to white supremacist, Nazi organizations. Many are unaware of reports in February 2009 of a white supremacist Neo-Nazi’s plot to develop a radioactive “dirty bomb” in Maine. And if a plot to kill nearly one hundred black Americans by those on trial in Tennessee is not a “terrorist plot,” then what is a terrorist plot? Those who spread hatred and supremacism are always a threat to our security, as well as to our equality and liberty. Their goals of hatred and violence have no racial boundaries as to their victims. Their war of hate is a war against all humanity.

So if anyone wonders if there is a good reason to defy racial supremacism, you can point to this map of hate groups and show them 900 good reasons today. You can tell them what racial supremacist organizations have done and continue to do in spreading hate and plotting violence in America.

But we don’t need 900 reasons, we only need one reason – our universally shared human rights of equality and liberty.

The threat of racial supremacists to all of humanity is the same threat that every other supremacist group poses to all of humanity. They are no different. They are not an afterthought to other threats. They are the same threat, the same problem. They demand the same response and attention from all of us.

That response must be a consistent defiance to those who seek to promote supremacism and hate – whether they are people at work, people we know, people we meet, or people in our own families. We can only honor Dr. King’s sacrifice by showing zero tolerance for supremacism and hatred, and by telling those who we see that would promote such ideologies – that we support humanity. We support humanity’s inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.

We must NEVER try to match hate with hate. Our defiance of supremacism is not hate. Our unwillingness to submit to those who would destroy our freedoms is not hate. Our resolve is our refusal to give in to fear. Our determination is to say to supremacism in America – never again. But we must never hate supremacists — we must hope for the redemption of supremacists in accepting our shared human rights of equality and liberty.

We need to teach those who hate that our support for the universal truths of human equality and liberty, and our respect for the dignity of humanity, is greater and larger than hate.

So on April 4 at 6 PM, I will ask you do to the right thing, the human thing, for those who are misguided and angry, for those who are consumed with rage and anger, and for those whose vision has been blinded by hate so much that they no longer realize that there is not a white America and a black America – that there is not any racial America – that there is only ONE America. That America – is our United States of America.

Do the right thing about those consumed by hatred and supremacism — and forgive them. Seek their redemption back into the family of humanity. Show that humanity’s love is greater than its hate. Demonstrate that we have learned the lessons from the past, and that we will forge a better future.

Show them that we are not afraid.

The Universal Truths of Human Equality and Liberty

In the world today, a series of groups, organizations, and individuals are determined to deny the truths of human equality and liberty. They seek to claim that their race, national origin, religion, gender, or other identity somehow allows them to have superiority over all other people. Others claim that we should not be talking about liberty and freedom because such inalienable human rights are offensive to some people. We reject these claims by supremacists and their apologists, as we view human equality and liberty as truths that we hold self-evident, truths that we must all share, truths that we must defend, and truths that humanity must embrace for peace and harmony.

A. The Truths We Hold Self-Evident

In America, “we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” This is not a question. This is not an opinion. This is a declaration of inalienable truths for all humanity – men and women of every kind. It is also a declaration of the basis for the identity of America itself.

These truths are not confined merely to America’s borders or to American citizens. We view these as universal truths for all of humanity. The United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) states that “the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world,” and that “all human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.”

Universal truths are truths for everyone. Equality and liberty are objective human rights, not subjective opinions. Therefore when we defend the truths of human equality and liberty, we must defend such truths for everyone – not just who we like or who are like us. The truths of such human rights of equality and liberty are not negotiable for countries, states, cities, or people who want some people to have different human rights than others. Universal truths are not an option for some, but not for others. Universal truths apply to everyone. Universal truths are not relativist, they are absolute.

The objective nature of human equality and liberty as truths is a concept that we must defend. They are truths that must be universally understood. We can’t accept the unnatural concept that different nations, different organizations, and people of different races and religions, can choose to determine whether the objective human rights of equality and liberty apply to humanity or not.

When we seek to find a direction and use a compass, the compass points to the directions of north, south, east, or west – regardless of where you are on Earth. We don’t have different compasses for different parts of the world – but the same compass works everywhere – drawing on the natural magnetic fields of the Earth itself.

Similarly, the natural laws of equality and liberty draw upon the inherent rights of humanity itself. It makes no more sense to deny that north is north or south is south than it does to deny that all men and women are created equal. We don’t need so-called “experts” to tell us either. We just need to accept and defend the universal truths for all of humanity.

B. The Truths That We All Must Share

Respecting diversity among humanity requires that we first respect the truths of our shared human rights of equality and liberty. Over the past several decades, many organizations have focused discussions and efforts on gaining respect for human diversity and multiculturalism. The objective of such efforts has been to ensure that unique cultures have representation and visibility in society. Many have maintained a consistent focus primarily on our differences, rather than on what we share. As a result, the truths that we all must share regarding equality and liberty for all of humanity are being eroded, and some believe that respecting multiculturalism means that different cultures can choose how they interpret human equality and liberty. In addition, we also see the growth of organizations that seek to defend the supremacism of individual races, religions, and identities of groups.

We need respect for different cultures and values. We need respect for diversity among humanity. We need tolerance for each other’s differences. We need equal opportunities as well as equal rights. But we won’t get there by forgetting the truths that we must all share on human equality and liberty. We can’t promote diversity of cultures without singularity in human rights. Because if we fail to prioritize the truths that we must all share on human rights, then we open up our support of cultural diversity to cultures of hate, cultures of oppression, cultures of totalitarianism, cultures of fear, and cultures of death.

All men and women are created equal – not all cultures are created equal. Respecting diversity does not mean respecting hate and oppression. The culture of racial supremacism, the culture of totalitarianism, the culture of religious extremism — these cultures are not the cultures that we must defend in seeking diversity. Cultures that defy the natural laws of human equality and liberty do not seek diversity; they seek destruction of our human rights.

Our priority must be for a UNIVERSAL culture of human equality and liberty. It is our universal culture of such inalienable freedoms that binds us together as humanity.

Humanity has been sent a message with the miracle of the rainbow. But too many don’t understand the message. We are not just to admire the spectrum of colors in the rainbow, but we are to understand that every unique color – even the colors that we cannot see with our human eyes – all come from the same sunlight. Without it, the rainbow would not exist.

The universal truths of human equality and liberty unite us together as humanity. While we may have different cultures, values, and ideas, without accepting these universal truths, ultimately we will lose what it means to be a human being.

C. The Truths That We Must Defend Around the World

There are many who believe that the universal truths of human equality and liberty are offensive. There are also some that believe that calling for such universal human rights is an attempt to control and dominate others. Those who seek equal rights and liberty for all of humanity seek no “control,” no “dominance,” and no “superiority.” It is precisely such attempts to control humanity by supremacists that such universal truths of human rights defy. For all of humanity, we seek nothing more and nothing less than recognizing that all men and women are equal, and that all of humanity shares the same universal human rights of equality and liberty.

You won’t see any calls for cultural superiority referenced in the United Nations’ Universal Declaration on Human Rights or in the American Declaration of Independence. These declarations call for the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty for “all” of humanity. “All” means everyone.

But some groups, some societies, and some nations want to create their own “brand” of human rights. They believe that equality, liberty, and freedom are not inalienable human rights, but open for interpretation by supremacists and totalitarians that hold power. They not only have the delusional arrogance to believe that they can redefine human rights; they also believe that they can define their own “world.” They believe that they can create their own closed societies where human rights are different there from the rest of the world and they can choose who deserves human rights and who doesn’t.

States and societies of oppression are not diverse cultures – they are anti-humanity cultures. Such states and groups that seek to declare civil war against the rest of humanity are not to be appeased; they must be confronted with our steadfast defense of equality and liberty as inalienable human rights. Such states and societies of oppression believe that they can divide the world into slave nations of oppression separate from free nations of equality and liberty.

But there is just one world – not a free world and a world of submission – not a world of liberty and a totalitarian world – not a world of equality and a world of supremacism. There is only one world. It is our shared home – our Earth.

Our Earth belongs to no one person, no one nation, and no one group. Our Earth belongs to all of humanity. All of Earth’s humanity deserves their inalienable human rights of equality and liberty – these are the truths that we must defend around the world.

In this shared home of Earth, when our shared human rights are attacked in one place, it is an attack on our rights globally. When our shared human rights are denied by one society, it is a rejection of all of our rights. When a fellow human being is murdered by those against equality and liberty, it is a mortal attack on our brothers and sisters in humanity. What we share in our human destiny of equality and liberty is much larger than our small differences in politics, nationalities, and points of view. An attack on the universal truths of equality and liberty anywhere is an attack everywhere. It is an attack on your human rights. It is an attack on your Earth, your home.

It is an attack that will not end with just one closed society, one slave nation, one society of submission – but is nothing less than an ever-growing assault upon freedom around the world. These attacks on equality and liberty demand our consistent defiance and consistent defense of these truths as inalienable human rights for all of humanity everywhere. These attacks are nothing less than an existential war on the meaning of humanity itself.

D. The Truths That Humanity Needs for Peace and Harmony

The universality of the human rights of equality and liberty is an essential truth necessary for peace and harmony. Equality and liberty are non-negotiable and universal to all of humanity. Our hope for human peace and harmony can only be found in the defense of these inalienable human rights. We know from history, from reason, and from the truths that we hold self-evident, that there is no peace with those who seek oppression, supremacism, totalitarianism, and submission. They will always want more, and accepting an attack on human rights for some people is accepting an attack on human rights for all people.

We must challenge those individuals that claim to represent us in governments, institutions, and international organizations that would accept negotiations with those who seek to create havens of oppression and submission. We must reject “engagement” for compromise on the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty. We must defy those who believe that they can sacrifice our brothers and sisters in humanity to those who seek to promote inhumanity as a way to find “peace for our times.”

Our history has repeatedly shown that supremacists and totalitarians are never appeased, never accommodated – no amount of human sacrifice is enough to satisfy their goals. Supremacists and totalitarians seek to defy humanity’s natural rights of equality and liberty and remold our Earth into a world of oppression and submission. Their dark vision is never merely a “regional” or a “local” sickness, but it is nothing less than a cancer that seeks to consume humanity itself. We must stop those who believe that allowing the cancer of oppression and supremacism to spread is an answer to healing the violence in our world. Such oppression and supremacism is violence itself, not just to some of humanity, but to all of humanity.

As Martin Luther King, Jr. said “the time is always right to do what is right.”

When leaders state that we should not speak of freedom and liberty for fear of offending supremacists and totalitarians, the time is right now to do what is right.

To turn the tide of appeasement for those who deny human rights and seek to oppress others, it is time right now for all free people to act. We can’t wait until next week, next month, and next year. Thousands are being murdered by supremacists around the world. Millions more are being oppressed and terrorized by supremacists and totalitarians. The forces that seek to deny equality and liberty are growing stronger every day. The forces that seek to spread hatred and deny freedom are gaining new converts to their anti-humanity cause every day.

Our silence in the face of this growing human catastrophe is nothing less than a death sentence to many who are dependent on our voice in defense of the universal truths of human equality and liberty today. Humanity’s conscience demands that we are silent no more.

The forces of supremacism and totalitarianism fear our universal truths of human equality and liberty. These truths are what can truly defeat them. Those who seek to oppress others fear the light of human liberty to inspire and encourage. Those who seek the submission of others fear the shield of human equality to gain equal protection for all. The forces of hate allied against humanity demand that we be silent about such liberty, freedom, and equality. They seek to deny our defense of these universal human rights.

This is why it so essential for us to organize, to speak out, and to make equality and liberty a priority to our government representatives, institutions, and international organizations. This is why it is so urgent that we replace those leaders who would appease those that deny such universal human rights. This is why it is so vital to use the forces of globalism, not for amoral and hypocritical profit without a conscience, but to consistently communicate our commitment to human rights to the world.

This is why we must defend these truths for our Earth, our home. We cannot allow supremacists and totalitarians to think that there is any place, any city, and any distant hamlet – where these universal truths do not apply. We cannot allow those who seek to spread hatred and division to believe that there is any dark corner where the bright light of these universal truths will not shine. We cannot allow those who argue for the submission of humanity to believe that there is any argument that will defy the universal truths of human equality and liberty.

Peace and harmony among humanity is dependent on our mutual respect, understanding, and acceptance of such universal equality and liberty for all of humanity. The hope for the future depends on our willingness to demonstrate our commitment to such universal truths.

These are the truths that we hold self-evident – that all men and women are created equal. We accept the universal truths that all men and women have the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.

If we accept these universal truths of human equality and liberty, we must live our lives to show that we mean what we say. We must demonstrate that we have the courage of our convictions.

Now is the right time to do what is right. Now is the right time to stand united to reclaim all of our Earth, all of our home, for equality and liberty.

Now is the right time to be Responsible for Equality And Liberty.

For details of what you can do in our common cause, see RealCourage.org.


Supremacism Isn’t American

Over the past six months, reports have continued to be published about a resurgence of racial supremacism in America.  Madeleine Gruen has reported on her concern regarding counterterrorism reporting that in “the post 9/11 era, white supremacist groups no longer receive the same sort of news media attention they once did.”  Last week, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) reported that  “926 hate groups were active in the U.S., up more than 4% from 888 in 2007″… and “more than a 50% increase since 2000.”  The SPLC map of such groups shows a wide range of such groups including both white and black racial supremacist organizations.  We continue to see reports of white racial supremacist groups activities, including reports of a terrorist plot against President Barack Obama (trial scheduled for April 2009), reports of a recent Ku Klux Klan murder reported in Louisiana, reports of white supremacist vandalism, reports of police officers in Nebraska and Florida ordered to resign due to their affiliation with the Ku Klux Klan, and reports of white supremacist racial fliers passed out in Tennessee, Florida, and Pennsylvania.

Such white supremacist groups should be taken as a serious threat – they have a history of violence and terrorism in America.  They have been involved in activities such as the cyanide bomb plot led by white supremacist William Krar in 2003 and have advocated violence against the American government, such as white supremacist Neo-Nazi Hal Turner’s support for terrorist attacks on the Senate.  Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh was associated with Neo-Nazi and white racial supremacists.

While some racial supremacists seek to gain adherents while they think that no one is looking, on twisted web sites of hate, and in dark corners of our nation, other such groups do so in the light of day and with the media reporting their meetings.   They call their activities as promoting “nationalism.”  On the web site by photojournalist Anthony Karen, he reports about “white nationalism,” stating that “white supremacism” is a “subgroup within white nationalism,” and that “[t]hey avoid the term ‘supremacy’ saying that it has negative connotation

When Supremacism Uses A Religious Disguise

Prior to World War II, what if Adolf Hitler had tried to infiltrate the United States, not with a series of German “Bund” organizations, but with a series of groups claiming that they were “religious” organizations? What if American federal, state, and local government organizations then engaged with such groups, gave them respectability, and even offered government support for their propaganda mission for fear of offending such “religious” organizations?  During the 1960s, what if the American federal government feared to act against the Ku Klux Klan, white supremacist organizations, and white supremacist segregation laws for fear of offending their “religious” beliefs?

Far-fetched? In fact, supremacist ideologies using the disguise of “religion” is one of the most serious propaganda threats to our human rights of equality and liberty today.

All Americans are entitled to freedom of speech and freedom of conscience.

But we must recognize that supremacist organizations have been leveraging these freedoms to gain institutional support within America by disguising their supremacist goals with “religious” identities. If we support the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty, our citizens and our government agencies should denounce supremacist organizations that promote hate, inequality, and even violence, regardless of their use of such “religious” disguises. The solution to unmasking such disguises is to honestly ask if such organizations support equality and liberty.

By looking at threats to our liberties from a human rights perspective, we can see threat patterns and avenues for public action in struggles with supremacist ideologies – past and present – whether we are dealing with extremism, racial supremacism, Aryan Nazi supremacism, or other supremacist ideologies. We need to remember that our response must be a consistent responsibility to equality and liberty in defiance of such supremacism, no matter how it is disguised.

The Growing Extremist Threat to Virginia

The Northern Virginia suburb of Washington DC has been growing as an Islamic supremacist haven. Amidst the many hard-working Virginians who serve our nation’s defense, civilian federal government, homeland security, and commercial businesses, extremist groups, organizations, and institutions have quietly expanded and gained members. Northern Virginia has been home to a wide series of extremist groups and leaders that have resisted investigations and challenge by the government and concerned citizens.  For years, Northern Virginia has long been a target of a network of extremist organizations.

Among these have included:

— Dar Al Hijra Islamic Center in Falls Church, Virginia – Freedom House has reported that Dar Al Hijra has had publications that spread hate, demanding that Islamic nations be given nuclear weapons “to face Israel and India,” (p. 46), and demanding segregation of the sexes (p. 64).   Dar Al Hijra’s previous imam, Anwar al-Aulaqi, has been suspected of links to Al-Qaeda’s 9/11 jihadists, and has been described as an “inspiration” to terrorists, suspected in “plotting attacks against America,” reported as praising Palestinian suicide bombers, and posting an essay on “Why Muslims Love Death.”  Dar Al Hijra’s subsequent imam, Sheikh Shaker Elsayed, has also been reported praising Palestinian suicide bombers, stating that “Violent Extemism is a must for everyone, a child, a lady and a man.”  Per Dal Al Hijra’s web site, this supporter of Violent Extemism continues to preach to Muslims in Northern Virginia.

— Dar Al-Arqam Islamic Center in Falls Church, Virginia – also known as the “Center for Islamic Information and Education” was a place where Ali al-Timimi frequently lectured.  Ali al-Timimi was convicted “on charges that he encouraged followers to join the Taliban and fight U.S. troops.”  It was also a focal point for the “Virginia Violent Extemism Network” that trained to support the extremist Lashkar-e-Taiba group — the same Lashkar-e-Taiba suspected in the November 2008 Mumbai attacks and that is suspected of designs for attacks on the United States.  According to the FBI, “eight individuals from Dar Al-Arqam … either obtained jihad training from Lashkar-e-Taiba or otherwise associated with the group in Pakistan, another from Dar Al-Arqam who joined Al-Qaeda in Saudi Arabia in 2003, two specially designated global terrorists, and an individual suspected of being an aide to Abu Musab al Zarqawi and affiliated with Al-Qaeda of Iraq.”  Al-Timimi and Al-Arqam have also been linked to terror groups in the United Kingdom.

International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT) in Herndon, Virginia – created from “seed money from the Muslim Brotherhood”… the same Muslim Brotherhood that calls for creation of an Islamic supremacist caliphate and whose motto is “Violent Extemism is our way.”  IIIT has been under investigation for financing terror organizations, and was part of the Operation Green Quest investigation.  This is also the same IIIT, whose Yusuf Talal DeLorenzo has gone on to advise on Sharia Finance boards for the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones, and who last month advised on Sharia Finance (PDF of presentation) in a conference in Washington DC.  This same IIIT provided a $1.5 million grant to Virginia’s George Mason University a few months ago to expand its “Islam studies program.”

— Muslim World League in Falls Church, Virginia – reported in 2005 that “U.S. agencies have been investigating the Muslim World League for years because of suspicions that it knowingly or unknowingly provided funds to Osama bin Laden.”

— The Institute of Islamic and Arabic Sciences in Fairfax, Virginia – where the Freedom House Center found “[s]everal hate-filled publications” (page 3), publications to “show that religious freedom is un-Islamic” (page 45), and promoting jihad (page 61).

This history should make Northern Virginia government officials and citizenry rightly concerned about the growth of extremism in their area.   The Washington Times has reported that those individuals in Falls Church, Virginia that have exercised their freedom of religion and have converted from Islam to Christianity live in fear.

But while federal government individuals are willing to challenge those extremists in Northern Virginia who have clearly been documented in committing a crime (like any other citizen would be), there remains little willingness to challenge the anti-equality, anti-liberty ideology of extremism itself, or even acknowledge that the ideology of extremism exists.

So it should not be surprising that supermarkets in Northern Virginia sell pro-Violent Extemism books, as Dave Gabautz has researched and found at the Halaco supermarket in Falls Church, Virginia a book that calls for:
— “It is, in short, time to identify the enemy and declare the Violent Extemism.”
— “He who equips a fighter in the way of Allah, or looks after a fighters family at home is as good as one who fought”
— “Priests in their churches, unlike recluse worshipping monks, should, of course be killed without any exception. Nuns along with Monks, deserve killing even more”
— “Not taking the Jews and Christians as friends, not following their deen, not submitting to bid’a, neither its holidays (National Days, etc), nor in habits, not entering their places of worship, nor participating in their festivals-all this is vital in the prelude to the attack of a new Violent Extemism.”
— “Strike at the time least expected. It follows that one should also strike at the place not expected. By extension, in light of the current situation, one may strike at several centres all at the same time, thus causing havoc in the enemy and in their response”.

In 2007, Virginia Governor Kaine appointed former Muslim American Society (MAS) president Esam Omeish to a Virginia state commission on immigration.  This is the same Muslim American Society founded by the “Violent Extemism is our way” Muslim Brotherhood.  Not surprisingly, there were online videos available shortly thereafter of Omeish calling for “the jihad way,” which prompted his resignation.  But two years later, we have a different story.  Now this same jihad-supporting Esam Omeish is running for office for the 35th district of the Virginia House of Delegates, portraying himself as the all-American immigrant success story.  Esam Omeish is meeting with voters at public libraries to discuss issues… but conveniently ignoring his background with the MB-founded MAS or his support for Violent Extemism – asking voters to “meet and greet with Esam Omeish, and talk to Esam about the issues most important to you.”  How about equality and liberty?  How about defying Islamic supremacism?

It is in this same Northern Virginia, where Violent Extemism books are sold in supermarkets, where Violent Extemism supporters are running for public office, where extremist organizations donate large sums of money to influence universities, and where extremists can lead “houses of worship” largely unchallenged by the majority of the citizens and its government, that we also see a growing academy designed to indoctrinate youth with the ideology of extremism.

In Fairfax County, Virginia, the Islamic Saudi Academy (ISA) has had a long and disreputable history, reported by the Washington Post as an institution whose “indoctrination begins in a first-grade text and is reinforced and expanded each year, culminating in a 12th-grade text instructing students that their religious obligation includes waging jihad against the infidel to ‘spread the faith.'”

This is the same Islamic Saudi Academy whose textbooks taught jihad to children, attacked all other religions, and told its children “As cited in Ibn Abbas: The apes are Jews, the people of the Sabbath; while the swine are the Christians, the infidels of the communion of Jesus.”  This is what the Islamic Saudi Academy books previously read AFTER the hate and intolerance was removed from them.

As the Associated Press has recently reported:
“In December 2001, two former ISA students, Mohammed El-Yacoubi and Mohammed Osman Idris, were denied entry into Israel when authorities there found El-Yacoubi carrying what the FBI believed was a suicide note linked to a planned martyrdom operation in Israel.  In 2005, a former ISA valedictorian, Ahmed Omar Abu Ali, was convicted in federal court of joining al-Qaida while attending college in Saudi Arabia and plotting to assassinate President George W. Bush.  Last year, the school’s then-director, Abdalla al-Shabnan, was convicted of failing to report a suspected case of child sex abuse.  Last year also was when the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom released a report saying the school’s textbooks contained several troubling passages, including one saying it is permissible for Muslims to kill adulterers and converts from Islam and another saying ‘the Jews conspired against Islam and its people.'”

During this time, the Fairfax County Government has leased the Islamic Saudi Academy facility to spread such hate and incite such violence.  As the Mount Vernon Gazette has reported, “The school building at 8333 Richmond Highway, is leased from Fairfax County. That lease recently came up for renewal and was renewed for one year with an option for two one year extensions on a motion from Mount Vernon District Supervisor Gerald Hyland, in whose district the school is located.”  Would the Fairfax County government have offered such leases to racial supremacist organizations?  But when supremacism wears a “religious” disguise, there is no willingness to ask this question by local officials.

On March 12, 2009, the Islamic Saudi Academy has now claimed (once again) that it has now truly removed all of the hate and intolerance from its textbooks.  However, AP reports that Institute for Gulf Affairs in Washington Director Ali “Al-Ahmed, whose group monitors politics and education in the Gulf, said the revised texts now being used at ISA make some small improvements in tone. But he said it’s clear from the books that the core ideology behind them — a puritanical strain of Islam known as Wahhabism that is dominant within Saudi Arabia — remains intact. ‘It shows they have no intention of real reform,’ al-Ahmed said.”

The timing is not likely to be a surprise, since on Wednesday, March 18, the Fairfax County Planning Commission will be considering a “special exception” to zoning laws to allow a further expansion of the Islamic Saudi Academy.   The Fairfax County government will be holding this meeting at 8:15 PM at the Board Auditorium of the Fairfax County Government Center, 12000 Government Center Parkway, Fairfax, Virginia 22035.  Activist groups are encouraging local citizens to attend and speak out.  I will be speaking as will others, who are opposed to the growth of Islamic supremacism intolerance, as represented by the history of the Islamic Saudi Academy’s teaching in Fairfax County.

This expansion of intolerant extremism is not unique to Washington DC’s suburb of Northern Virginia. In Michigan, Minnesota, New York, New Jersey, California, and states around the country, new beachheads of extremism are developing.  Many in Virginia and around the nation are not yet willing to act in the face of growing such havens for intolerance and extremism. But lessons can be learned from dealing with other supremacist ideologies on the vital necessity to confront supremacist groups in communities and states, before they develop a stanglehold of fear and intolerance in an area.

Those struggling with the growing institutionalization and development of facilities to promote extremism in Virginia and around the United States feel that they are dealing with a unique challenge. And in important ways, they are correct. The large-scale tolerance of Islamic supremacism disguised as “religious” freedom is unparalleled.  But in other ways, we have seen this challenge before in defending human rights. Nazis and white supremacists have been using this tactic long before 9/11 to gain respectability, influence, and acceptance. Like extremists, they remain a threat to equality and liberty. Like extremists, those responsible for equality and liberty must defy their ideology and those who would appease them.

Our freedom of religion ensures that individuals will not be unfairly discriminated against because of their beliefs.  Such freedoms are designed to ensure equal rights.  But these equal rights – are simply that – rights of equality, not superiority.  With such equal rights come the equal responsibilities to be accountable for intolerance, promotion of hate, and incitement of violence, like any other citizen.

Lessons Learned From Other Supremacist Threats

In Idaho, Richard Butler’s Nazi Aryan Nations organization maintained a 40 acre compound, where 300 to 400 Nazis joined Butler in his quest for a new “Aryan nation.”  In a 1999 report, the FBI said the goal of Aryan Nations was to forcibly take five states — Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Washington and Montana — and form an Aryan homeland.  Some of the Aryan Nations members broke into small groups that “carried out string of bank robberies, murders and counterfeiting activities.”

In a twisted move designed to gain further credibility for the Nazi organization, Richard Butler also created a “religious” organization for the Nazis called the “Church of Jesus Christ Christian.”  This shows the danger in interpreting our religious freedoms as providing superior, rather than equal rights.  While Adolf Hitler may not have thought of using “religious” organizations to infiltrate America with Nazi hatred, Nazi Richard Butler did.   The “religious disguise” of a Nazi organization claiming religious protection for hatred, intolerance, and incitement demonstrates the folly of ignoring supremacist threats in “religious” disguises.  The fact that the Nazi Aryan Nations had relatively small recruitment and success in its supremacist goals does not make it any less of a lesson on why a “religious” disguise must never be tolerated to mask supremacism – whether it is Nazi supremacism, racial supremacism, or extremism.

As the people of Idaho were initially slow to respond, they paid a price for allowing supremacist hate and intolerance to grow in Idaho.   Marshall Mend, a member of Idaho Human Relations Task Force, said “There are still people who will not come to Idaho because they think it’s a haven for hatred.”   Tony Stewart, a political science professor from North Idaho College, warns “Never, never take the position that because there are few of them, they will not do harm.”  Over time, the people of Idaho responded to this Nazi supremacist threat.   The Aryan Nation Nazis eventually made a mistake, and when their security guards attacked a woman and her son, a court awarded a $6.3 million judgment against the Aryan Nations, bankrupting them and costing them their 40 acre compound in Idaho.  The lawyer leading the lawsuit against the Aryan Nations, Norman Gissel, stated “Other than our professions and our families, that’s all we did for 15 to 20 years was fight the Nazis.”

Idaho is still recovering from the stigma of supremacism. The press later reported that “[t]he compound has been renamed Peace Park, Mend said, but northern Idaho’s image has not recovered.”  “‘It’s difficult to quantify the amount of the impact,’ said Jonathan Coe, president of the Coeur d’Alene Chamber of Commerce. ‘But I can tell you for a fact, we lost business because of them. Some vacationers didn’t visit, businesses didn’t locate here, and people chose not to retire here.”

But the people of Idaho have a message for you on the seriousness of supremacism: “Please, please never remain silent. Please do not confine yourselves to a counter-rally, and please commit your life to the dignity of others.”

Other racial supremacists have tried the same tactics to gain credibility with a religious “disguise,” ranging from the white supremacist “Christian Identity” hate group, the white supremacist “World Church of the Creator” hate group, and absurdly even a Ku Klux Klan group that calls itself the “Church of the National Knights.” But the Indiana-based “Church of the National Knights” group didn’t have the people of Indiana laughing with a five acre property designed to promote Ku Klux Klan white supremacism and hatred.  The LA Times reported that “[r]esidents there can hear the gunshots, the shouts and the screech of the public-address system the Klan has used at some ceremonies. When the corn is low, several can see the cross burnings from their backyards. Property values in this modest neighborhood are shot. ‘Our homes aren’t worth a plug nickel now,’ one resident said bitterly.”

Some may ask, what relevance such lessons have to such transnational challenges as extremism.  The relevance is not in the relative “legitimacy” of a “religious” disguise for supremacist hatred and intolerance.  Nor is it in the degree to which such supremacism is widely adopted, accepted, or tolerated.  The relevance is in what supremacists have in common and what those of us responsible for equality and liberty have in common.

Despite their differences and their different “religious” disguises, supremacists have one thing in common — hate.   This hate is always the same hate — whether it is a Neo-Nazi “church” calling for hatred against Jews, whether it is a white supremacist “religious group” calling for hatred against blacks, whether it is the so-called “Westboro Baptist Church” desecrating the funerals of soldiers and calling for the death of homosexuals, whether it is the “Nation of Islam” group sadly tolerated and accepted by some traditional human rights groups while its leaders spread hate, intolerance, racial bigotry, and extremism — or whether it is extremists calling for jihad, calling Jews apes and Christians pigs, and oppressing women around the world.

Hate is hate.  No matter what its color, no matter what its brand, and no matter what its “religious” disguise.  Such hatred, intolerance, and incitement to violence deserves no “religious” disguise and “religious” protection.  In every case, and every permutation, such hatred against equality and liberty is wrong – and is an attack on our inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.

There are plenty of important lessons to be learned in looking at these things that supremacists have in common, regardless of whether they use a “religious” disguise or not to justify hate and intolerance.   The Nation of Islam’s Louis Farrakhan has been proud of being compared to Adolf Hitler, who he calls “a great man.”  The Nazi Aryan Nation’s later leader August Kreis has praised Al-Qaeda and has said that “I want to instill the same jihadic feeling in our peoples’ heart, in the Aryan race.”  The Nazi Aryan Nations gladly promoted the hate-mongering rants of ex-Nazi David Myatt, now Violent Extremist Abdul-Aziz ibn Myatt.  And the list of the common campaigns of hate among supremacists goes on and on and on.

Such campaigns of hate and division are why it is so essential to recognize the common characteristics and goals of supremacism.  This is why it is so essential to acknowledge them as “supremacist.”  This is why it is vital that we do not allow “religious” characterizations to protect those who seek to promote hate, intolerance, and violence.   While there are many who would employ euphemisms in describing supremacist organizations — such as calling racial supremacists as “nationalists,” or calling Islamic supremacists as “Islamists” (as it has currently been re-defined by Washington policy wonks, not as previously defined by the 9/11 Commission) — such euphemisms simply shield supremacist ideologies from the bright light of the truth of equality and liberty.

This challenge is further compounded by those who believe that supremacism that claims a “religious” origin is automatically exempted from scrutiny, criticism, and challenge.  If we accept the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty within the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the American Declaration of Independence, we must reject such false protections from those would turn our own freedom of conscience against us by claiming “religious” supremacism as an untouchable platform to promote hatred and the destruction of equality, liberty, and freedom itself.   For Americans, we fiercely defend freedom of conscience and religion.  But we also recognize that all citizens share both equal rights and equal responsibilities.  The Free Exercise Clause of the American Constitution ensures that those claiming exercise of their religious beliefs are not singled out for discriminatory treatment — not that they have any superior rights or lesser responsibilities to the law from other citizens.  We believe in equality for all.

For those religious individuals who worship a God of love, there should be no fear in challenging those who would leverage so-called “religious” beliefs as a safe haven and harbor for hate.

A New Hope – Our Common Bond of Humanity

Consistency in challenging supremacist organizations truly matters.  Some traditional human rights communities have not grasped that challenging supremacist groups is the same problem — whether they claim to be empowered to spread hatred, intolerance, and violence based on a “religious” claim — or not. That must change. We must recognize the problem of supremacism itself as a monolithic threat to all of humanity’s equality and liberty.   We must defy those who would give supremacism any other name and allow it to fester in the darkness of public inattention.

What supremacists believe is that they can endless draw upon the weakest parts of humanity, on hatred, on differences, and on divisions.  Supremacists are dependent on our inhumanity to others.   They believe that the truths that we hold self-evident that all men and women are created equal is a lie.  They count on you questioning it too.  They depend on our unwillingness to seek out the true essence of the goodness and decency in humanity.   They live to exploit the divisions among us.   They count on our FEAR.  They hope to manipulate our fear over our hope in human rights.  They seek to leverage our fear to further divide us away from each other as human beings and to get us to deny our shared human rights in equality and liberty.   They play upon on our fear to deny that those of us who are different from each other may not deserve the same human rights.

But the fears that we have as individuals are smaller than the hope that we can offer one another by our shared consensus in the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.  When we say the words that “all men and women are created equal,” we tap into a force greater than ourselves as individuals by recognizing, just as supremacism has a common bond in hate, humanity has a common bond in the hope of equality and liberty for all.

Those responsible for equality and liberty have no choice but to oppose supremacism — to do otherwise we be to deny who we are as human beings and our common bond and destiny together.

This leads to the fundamental decision that all free people must make – you can’t hold two different standards on equality and liberty. You either support these inalienable human rights or not. In the same way, you can’t have two different standards in defying supremacists threatening equality and liberty – you are against them or you’re not.

There are no “but not in this case” clauses in the American Declaration of Independence’s support of the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty. There are no “exception rules” in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Everyone deserves equal rights, not just those who are like us, and not just people who we like. Everyone means everyone. The inalienable human rights of equality and liberty are for all of humanity.  It is “ideological” to believe in the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.  It is the ideology of what humanity is all about.

The survival of our common bond of hope means setting aside our differences to stand united against the existential threat of supremacism. Supremacists of every kind share their common goal of spreading hatred and exploiting fear to divide and conquer all of humanity.  The shared goal of supremacists is to enslave the human spirit and to crush the human rights of equality and liberty. Our responsibility for equality and liberty must be to defy supremacists and to deny them a safe haven or protection by using a “religious” disguise to spread hate and violence throughout society.

We have a new hope.  That hope lies in a humanity that can reach out to each other and find the good and decent part within each other.  That hope lies in our ability to remember the importance of respect and decency towards one another.  That hope lies in humanity’s ability to reject blind hate and deny those who would manipulate us with fear to ignore the threat of supremacism.

But most of all, that hope lies in our common bond within a humanity that defends the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.   It is this new hope that will demand that we…

Fear No Evil.  Because We Are Not Afraid.

[Postscript – see also Sources documents for additional reading and background information.]

Save Women Now

Every day, women are under attack by extremism that supports and approves of oppression, mutilation, and murder of women. According to leaders and followers of extremism, they have the right to commit violence against women. extremism views oppression of women as a legitimate “right,” violence against women as a legitimate “right,” and murdering women as a legitimate “right.”

Humanity’s inalienable human rights include equality and liberty, freedom of conscience, freedom of speech, and the freedom to pursue happiness. No one has the “right” to oppress women, no one has the “right” to violence against women, and no one has the “right” to murder women. Humanity must defy the dark and twisted vision of extremists who believe that they can act without challenge and without consequences.

We need to defy this extremist view against women – for the mothers of the world, for the daughters of the world, and for the sisters of the world. We must demand that humanity and its leaders stop the slaughter of women by extremists. As extremists call for their “right” to murder women, we must demand from ourselves and from our leaders that we Save Women Now.

This global threat against women must be confronted by both men and women, not just by being “sorry” about random violence or about “extremist” actions against women, but by demanding that our representatives acknowledge that extremism threatens them, and by calling for global action against extremism.

Concerned citizens are speaking out on this issue in a public rally on March 8, International Women’s Day, at 1 PM at the Capitol Reflecting Pool in Washington DC. All those concerned about this issue are invited to join this public rally and to sign our petition calling for world leaders to acknowledge and act on the threat of extremism against women.  We also ask that concerned citizens support the important work of women leaders reporting on these crimes against women, such as author and feminist Phyllis Chesler and many others.  We need to support courageous leaders in this important effort to save women around the world.

1. Failure to Acknowledge Extremism Empowers Its War on Women

In October 2008, a thirteen year old girl named Aisha Ibrahim Duhulow was murdered by supporters of this extremist ideology — that murders thousands of women and girls every year. She was stoned to death as a crowd of 1,000 watched her punishment at the hands of fifty extremist men. Her “crime” was that she was victim of gang rape. Her death by stoning was the result of extremists’ support of an extreme version of Sharia law. As she begged for mercy, their reply was they were doing the will of Allah. The United States Senate responded to this act of terrorism with U.S. Senate Resolution 711. Senate Resolution 711 “condemned” this action.  There was no recognition of the extremist ideology behind these attacks. The U.S. Senate’s only real call for action in this Senate Resolution 711 was to ask Somalia to “strengthen the rule of law” in that nation. Since then, the new president of Somalia has adopted Sharia law for all of Somalia — while not action to challenge the  extremist version of Sharia law that extremists used to justify murdering this child.

Being “sorry” is not enough. Politicians’ “condemnations” are not enough. Ignoring the extremist ideology behind the slaughter and oppression of women in America and around the world is not enough. The failure of our leaders to acknowledge and act against extremism has emboldened extremists’ war on women. If we don’t speak out, if we don’t demand more of our national and international leaders, more women will be murdered by extremists, more women will attacked by Islamic supremacists, and more women will be oppressed by extremists.

We demand that our representatives in the United States government recognize the institutionalized extremist ideology that has declared war on the women of the world. We are circulating an online petition among free people demanding such acknowledgement of this Islamic supremacist threat to women and calling for action against Islamic supremacism in the United States of America and around the world.

2. American Women Under Attack by Extremism

We see the affects of extremism on women in America. In this nation that is the “land of the free,” extremists do not fear beating and murdering women. They defy equality and liberty even in America. What do they have to fear when our government leaders refuse to acknowledge that extremism even exists?

In an America where our government leaders pretend that Islamic supremacism does not exist, women are threatened, beaten, and murdered for their refusal to submit to those who believe that women are second-class citizens. In New York, one woman was beheaded and another was beaten and told she would be treated “like a dog.” In Pittsburgh, a woman was threatened to be killed for “defaming” Islam.  In Atlanta, a daughter was murdered for her Muslim father’s view of “honor.” In Dallas, teenage girls were murdered by their Muslim father for the “crime” of having boyfriends.   In Cleveland, a woman is murdered by her male cousins in name of Islam.

When a successful American Muslim who leads a television station designed to promote “moderate Islam” beheads his wife, we are still told to ignore the pervasive threat of extremism against women. We are asked to believe that “honor killings” are the result of poverty and ignorance, when such an educated, powerful, assimilated role model for Muslims in America beheads his wife.

Repeatedly, we are told that “honor killings” are cultural and have nothing to do with Islam. We are told to ignore when murderers that commit such crimes state that they do so for “Allah.” We are told to ignore the Islamic governmental leaders around the world that defend such “honor killings” against women, as they emerge from mosques. We are told to ignore the governments of extremist nations as they reject protection of women from honor killings. We are told to ignore an extremist ideology, where imams counsel Muslims on how much, not whether, to beat their wives. We are told not to notice when a group instructing our government leaders in Washington DC on how to fight “extremism” — praises an extremist imam who defends violence against women as a “scholastic giant.”

We are told that we simply don’t understand how some cultures view “honor.”

In America, we do recognize honor. America recognizes “honor” in our Declaration of Independence, which also declares our commitment to the inalienable rights of equality and liberty. We understand that there is no “honor” in the cowardly murdering and beating of women and girls. We understand that there is no honor in the oppression of women. We understand that supremacist ideologies that reject equality and liberty for women are un-American.

It is because we do understand the meaning of “honor,” which demands the support of equality and liberty for all, that we demand that American government leaders acknowledge the existence of extremism and act on the threat of extremism to women.  Now.

3. The Global Femicide Against Women

This year for International Women’s Day, March 8, the United Nations has designated the theme as “women and men united to end violence against women and girls.” This week there have been meetings in New York City and other parts of the world calling for an end to general violence against women. We join with the United Nations in denouncing all such violence, but we also demand that the United Nations do more than conduct campaigns against generic violence.

We demand that the United Nations leaders and international leaders acknowledge and act on the global threat of extremism against Muslim and non-Muslim women in the world. The ideology of extremism that rejects equality and liberty also rejects respect and decency towards women. The pursuit of “non-judgmental” tactics and talks alone to end violence against women, while ignoring the ideology of extremism that is at root of much of the violence against women in the world, will always be nothing more than band aids in a raging war.

Yakin Erturk, the UN’s rapporteur on violence against women, has pointed to the failure of the international community to effectively pressure those who ignore extremists’ femicide against women. Ms. Erturk states that: “There is no time left to lose any more as this is a growing crisis. Women must demand that their governments implement agreements on women’s equality, rights and an end to violence against women, which have been signed but have yet to be carried out. In these countries, those who speak on behalf of Islam still justify things like stoning or killing a woman for this or that reason as being part of their religion. I have heard this at the most official of levels… Islamic countries have become stigmatized as being misogynist societies which are inherently anti-women.” AFP has reported that she also told them that “laws protecting women are not enforced or are weakened due to pressure from religious groups.”

But we cannot ignore that the unwillingness for such governments to act, the endorsement of violence against women by some government officials, and the pressure to prevent enforcement of laws protecting women — all come from the same ideological source of extremism. The United Nations, American government leaders, and government leaders around the world must acknowledge that this femicide is more than random violence or “backward” people — it is an institutionalized attack on women rooted in extremism.

extremists around the world mock the very humanity of women. They refer to quotes by Muhammad and the Qur’an to defend their actions against women. They devalue women in their extremist culture and law. They view that words of women do not have the value of that of men. They suppress women’s ability to learn. They demand that women hide their face. They even justify their “right” to murder women.

A greater disgrace is the unwillingness of international leaders of the world to stand up for the rights of women under attack by Islamic supremacists. Such leaders have chosen to look the other way as women are murdered around the world by extremists; such leaders have decided that such women are expendable.

On February 28, 2009, the Chechen president emerged from his mosque to tell reporters that he defends the “right” of extremists to murder women in so-called “honor killings.” He told reporters that such women deserved to die for their “loose morals.” The Russian government accepts this Chechen government leader as their answer to keep “separatists” from gaining power in Chechnya. The message from the Russian government is clear – women are expendable.

On February 17, 2009, the Pakistan government surrendered to the extremist Taliban’s goals to spread extremist Sharia law in the northwest part of Pakistan. The Pakistan women have been a constant target of Islamic supremacists. They are murdered, beaten, and oppressed. Nearly 8,000 cases of abuses against Pakistani woman, including so-called “honor killings,” were reported in 2008. A million pregnant Pakistani women are abused every year. Our State Department has defended Pakistan’s surrender in the spread of extremist Sharia law in that nation. Our so-called military leaders have said that they will take a “wait and watch” attitude towards the growth of extremists in Pakistan that denounce democracy and who oppress and murder women. The message from the American government about Pakistan is also clear – women are expendable.

In Chechnya, Pakistan, Somalia, and around the world, international and American government leaders have adopted a “non-judgmental” approach to the growth of extremist Sharia law used to justify the oppression, violence, and murder of women.  The international message from such leaders is clear — women are expendable.

So the unforgivable femicide by extremists continues around the world, day after day after day — without challenge, without defiance. Such atrocities do not just happen in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Africa, and other parts of Middle East. In Jordan alone, “considered one of the most liberal countries in the Middle East,” a third of the violent deaths are due to extremist “honor killings.”   In Turkey, there is no stigma attached to the 1,000 extremist honor killings in that country.  In Syria, extremist men may face only three to six months in prison for murdering a woman – that is how devalued women’s lives have become — and extremists want to eliminate that law as too onerous on extremist men.  Syrian extremist also men get a certificate of “good character”  for “defending their honor” after they murder a woman in Syria.

The extremist war on women is not just a Middle Eastern, Asian, or an African problem — it is the world’s problem:
— in Canada where a young girl, Aqsa Parvez, is murdered for “honor” and lies in an unmarked grave
— in France where Muslim women are set on fire for not following “Islamic tradition”
— in the United Kingdom where women are threatened and killed based on an extremist view of honor — where just a kiss could be a death sentence and where women live in fear of extremist retaliation
— in Germany where women and girls are murdered and set on fire for having “un-Islamic values”
— in Denmark and Sweden, where women refuse to accept “arranged marriages”
— in Italy where women are murdered for not being “a good Muslim girl”
— in Israel where Arab women are poisoned, strangled, and shot for defying extremist traditions
— and in America where a series of murders in Dallas, Atlanta, New York, Cleveland, and other cities prove that women are not safe from extremism here.

It is our problem.

The names of the endless victims of extremism’s war on women may not be remembered by many of the public:  Amina and Sarah Said, Methal Dayem, Aqsa Parvez, Sandeela Kanwal, Lidia Motylska, Morsal Obeidi, Hatin Surucu, Banaz Mahmood, Caneze Riaz and her daughters, Uzma Rahan, Samaira Nazir, Hina Salem, Sazan Bajez-Abdullah, Rudayena Jemael, Hesha Yones, Ibtihaz Hasoun, Fadime Sahindal, Zahida Peeveen, Ghazala Khan, Dua Khalil, Rim Abu Ghanem, Sabia Rani, Shafilea Ahmed, Randa Abdel Qader, Sonay Mohammad, and so many, many more, including many that we will never know their names.

There is no monument to remember these women victims of extremism, nor does our government recognize the attacks on them as terrorism.  We rightly recognize and remember the 3,000 victims of the 9/11 terrorism attacks, but the 5,000 victims of “honor killings” have no day set aside to remember them, and many of our world leaders would just as soon forget about them.   We need to call an end to that.  I propose that we re-define March 8, International Women’s Day, as a day where we annually remember the victims of extremism’s femicide, as a new Save Women Now Day in defiance of the extremists around the world.  Women’s lives, hopes, dreams, freedom, and equality are never expendable, no matter how inconvenient it may be for some world leaders who would rather look the other way on extremism.

On a new Save Women Now Day, we must demand a new course for our leaders – one that rejects tolerance of women as expendable victims, one that rejects ignoring the ideology of extremism that threatens them, and one that rejects any appeasement of Islamic supremacism where the safety and human rights of women are traded away to avoid confrontation with those who stand against equality and liberty.

The thousands of victims of extremism’s war on women may be inconvenient for those international leaders who would trade women’s lives to avoid confronting and angering extremism.  We must challenge our leaders and our public to never forget that the extremism violence against women and girls is the most despicable act of terrorism.  We must demand action to end the extremist terrorism against women and girls around the world.

4. A Common Defense Based on Equality, Liberty, and Courage

In America, we have some people who are in the foreign policy and counterterrorism communities with a vested interest in avoiding confrontation with extremists.  They believe that we can find some type of “reconciliation” or “engagement” with extremist political organizations as a way to reduce violence and the threat of terrorism around the world.  They have failed to learn lessons from history that there is no appeasing a supremacist ideology – of any kind.  Supremacists always have one goal in defeating equality and liberty, and that is to continue to expand and to always seek “more” – as we have seen with the continuing war on women expanding around the world by extremists.

When challenged on such appeasement, they will tell you that your concerns are groundless, that they are the “experts,” and if you seek to prioritize the human rights of equality and liberty, they will complain that you are an “ideologue.”  In their eyes, “confrontation” is a dirty word.  As thousands of women and girls are murdered around the world by extremists, they don’t view that as “terrorism.”  There is no “counterterrorism” policy on the endless stream of murders, violence, attacks, and oppression of women around the world by extremists, because our government leaders don’t recognize that extremism exists, and they don’t view its war on women as “terrorism.”

We need to tell American and international leaders of the world that they are listening to the wrong “experts.”  It is not merely “experts” in tactics that we need.  It is not “experts” in Islamic studies that we need.  It is not “experts” in appeasement that we need.  We need experts in equality and liberty.  Those experts are you – the people.  We need those responsible for equality and liberty to speak as the ones willing to commit our nation to defending the human rights of women around the world.  We need the public experts in equality and liberty to tell our national and international leaders that we won’t silently tolerate a heinous war on women and girls by extremists any longer.

We once faced another war, at another time, with a great president named Franklin D. Roosevelt.   When our people were attacked by Aryan Nazi supremacists and fascists, FDR did not see victory based on the recommendations from “experts” on supremacism, nor did he see victory based on recommendations from “experts” on fascism.  FDR understood that such supremacists and fascists may have started the war, but “the massed, angered forces of common humanity will finish it.”  Those are the experts we need to get America back on the right side of history, common humanity’s experts in equality and liberty.  We need the voice of those who understand that there is no appeasing extremists.  We need the voice of those who understand that the defense of equality of liberty for all women and all men – is always our first priority.   It is, after all, what we are fighting for.

Moreover, we need the courage of all humanity in fighting the Islamic supremacist enemy.  There are many many courageous women who have sounded the alarm on the war on women by extremism.  History will never forget these profiles in courage.  But we need more than courageous women in fighting this global war of extremism against women and humanity.  We need many more men to take a stand.

For those men who tolerate and accept, for those men who choose to consciously ignore, and worst of all, for those men who embrace and support the actions of Islamic supremacists in oppressing, humiliating, mutilating, beating, and murdering of women in America and around the world — I only have one question. What type of men are you?

As we defy extremism’s war on women, we need the courage of all free humanity, both women and men, to stand united in their responsibility for equality and liberty.  We need both women and men to say to those extremists who seek to oppress, attack, and murder the women of the world — your days of evil are numbered, and we will not tolerate you any longer.

5. The Hope for Women and Humanity

Those who think this is not their problem — I challenge you to look to your mother, to your wife, to your daughter, to your sister, to your neighbor, to any woman that you know in the world. Do they deserve this? Does any other woman in the world deserve this? Is this the future we want want our children to inherit? A world where extremists devalue women as human beings?

This war that extremism is waging on the women of the world will only continue, will only succeed, and will only claim more victims — if we choose to continue to tolerate it and remain silent — if we choose that defying them is not important enough — if we choose to ignore the hope that our defiance of Islamic supremacism could bring to women around the world.

We are that hope for the hopeless, that voice for the voiceless, and that courage for those who live in fear. As human beings, we are the ones responsible for equality and liberty. The hopes of the women in the world start with you.   This is why we must rally in public, this is why we must generate petitions to our leaders, this is why must reach out to our fellow human beings to remember that equality and liberty are our responsibility.

But to win this war against extremists, we need our greatest weapon that we can find in the essence of humanity itself.  We will need to grasp and hold on tight to that essence of humanity as we fight an extremist ideology that defies equality and liberty, that defies human rights, and that degrades women and men around the world. We will need to embrace the true essence of humanity as we challenge the darkness of an extremism that mocks the dignity and the hope of a humanity where all men and women are created equal. No matter how they threaten us, no matter what they do to us, no matter who they kill, our resolve to fighting the evil of extremism must remain steadfast. We must remember who and what we are as human beings.

There are many who believe that the root of humanity is in our fallibility, in our weakness, and in our inability to do the just and decent thing. But I submit that the essence of humanity is something altogether different.

I believe that the essence of humanity can be found in those who understand that all men and women are created equal. I believe that the essence of humanity can be found in those who fight to defend humanity’s inalienable right to liberty and the pursuit of happiness. I believe that the essence of humanity can be found as a light of hope, courage, and wisdom within each human being. I believe that the essence of humanity can be found in the bravery of love and mercy to our fellow human beings.

So in defying extremism, I believe that we need to reach deep inside of ourselves and find the place that is that essence of humanity – find the unique spark that makes us human beings – find that fearless rock of courage within ourselves that is what it truly means to be human. It is in the essence of humanity itself that we will find that there is no choice in defending our mothers, our sisters, our daughters – in defending women around the world – from extremism.

Because it is in the heart and soul of humanity itself that we find the essence of who and what we are — beings that can rise to confront the challenges of darkness — beings who can spread the light of truth about humanity’s inalienable rights of equality and liberty — but most of all, even in the darkest hour — we find we are people who will…

Fear No Evil

[Postscript – see also Sources documents for additional reading and background information.]


There Are No “Good” or “Moderate” Supremacists

There are no “good” or “moderate” supremacists.  Supremacists may employ more or less destructive tactics, but their adherence to a supremacist ideology itself is never “good” or “moderate.” History has shown that supremacists consistently reject the idea that humanity has an inalienable right to equality and liberty.  By definition and as shown by history, every identity-based supremacist group rejects such human rights — including such supremacists as white supremacists, Aryan Nazi supremacists, and extremists.   Therefore, American government leaders who are responsible for equality and liberty should categorically reject such supremacist groups, nations, and adherents, right?

Yet, in the case of extremism, our governmental leaders continue to fail in this responsibility.  Moreover, it is not only just American government leaders in denial about such supremacism, but also American mainstream media, foreign policy groups, and other aspects of society have joined an army of appeasement on extremism which threatens the very foundation of equality and liberty on which our nation exists.

In the past several weeks, we have seen American government officials calling for “reconciliation” with extremists in Afghanistan, and listening to the counsel of those who state that America must negotiate with “reconcilable” aspects of the extremist Taliban.   We have seen American government officials alternately ignore and defend Pakistan’s surrender to the extremist Taliban in the northwest portion of Pakistan, where Pakistan has agreed to the Taliban’s demand to implement extremist Sharia law.   We have heard the deafening silence by such American leaders as Pakistan extremists denounce democracy and advocate global extremist rule, with such Pakistani “peace” negotiators echoing the very sentiments of Al-Qaeda itself — as Osama Bin Laden seeks “the greater state of Islam from the ocean to the ocean, Allah permitting.”

We have seen the calls by Senators Kerry and Lugar for Americans to provide billions of dollars to Pakistan as a reward for such a surrender on human rights and Pakistan’s recent release of an individual who sought to spread nuclear weapons technology to other extremist nations.  Moreover, we have seen American government leaders invite those who seek such surrender on extremism to America’s national capital for discussions and for entertainment of congressional leaders who support engagement with the Muslim Brotherhood and other extremist groups.

We have seen a growing pattern of new individuals added to American government foreign policy with a history of appeasement on such issues.   We have seen American media spin reports on polls of global Muslims who support the extremist objectives of Al-Qaeda promoted as Muslims opposing Al-Qaeda’s “terrorist methods.” We have seen America media repeatedly refer to the idea of a “good Taliban,” while such media ignore the growing global crisis of extremism in threatening human rights and lives around the world.

But the larger crisis point that continues to build is the growing gap between American government leaders and mainstream media leaders who are willing to appease supremacism and surrender on equality and liberty — versus a growing number in the American public that are willing to defy supremacism and be responsible for equality and liberty.

With every new embarrassment, with every new outrage by such appeaser government leaders and mainstream media,  those responsible for equality and liberty are becoming more determined to prove that the appeaser crowd will not represent America.

Apologist speakers are outraged that “Americans do not know the difference between Islamists, who have a clear goal of creating a national Islamic state, and terrorists who call themselves jihadists.”   They are outraged that we recognize that extremists are extremists, no matter what their tactics are.   Such apologists seek those supporting freedom to surrender, saying: “the only way to win a cosmic war is to refuse to fight in one.”  They fail to understand that being responsible for equality and liberty is a human responsibility that doesn’t end – and as we have fought supremacism before, we will continue to fight supremacism in the future.  We are responsible for equality and liberty – yesterday, today, and tomorrow.

1. The Evil of Supremacism is Never “Good” or “Moderate”

Could you imagine being led in World War II by those who wanted us to believe that there were “Good Nazis” versus “Bad Nazis”? Or to try to distinguish between “Extremist Nazis” versus “Moderate Nazis”? Or seeking the evolution of Aryan Supremacist Nazism into becoming a “mainstream” political ideology for “reconciliation” of “moderate Nazis”?

Similarly, where would we be in America’s civil rights today, if our national confrontation against white supremacists was led by those whose idea of defending equality and liberty was to try to distinguish between the “Good KKK” versus the “Bad KKK”? Or to try to suggest that our national strategy should be based on recognizing the difference between “extremist white supremacists” versus “moderate white supremacists”? Or seeking the continued tolerance of white supremacism as a “mainstream” political ideology for the vague goals of national “reconciliation”?

Imagine further if appeasers rationalized that such “reconciliation” with supremacists could be achieved by addressing “historical grievances” by such groups. Such as, perhaps entertaining the Nazi “grievances” regarding Czechoslovakia and Europe, or their “grievances” with Jews? Or entertaining white supremacist “grievances” calling for “separate but equal” segregation, concerns about federal government “meddling” in local white supremacist-based laws, or their “grievances” with blacks? What if our answer to Nazis and white supremacists had simply been to provide them with more “economic development opportunities” in the absurd belief that this would make them abandon their supremacist ideologies?

Such ideas are obviously absurd. The very term “moderate supremacist” is an oxymoron. A “mainstream” political ideology of Aryan supremacist Nazism or white supremacism would still be inimical to the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty. History showed the determination of the allied nations to crush Aryan supremacist Nazism throughout Germany after the war. History shows the determination of Americans to crush white supremacism in this nation in the 1960s, a war of ideas that continues against the fringe remnants even today. In both examples of confronting and defeating a supremacist ideology, we did not cave in to those who would call for “reconciliation” with “moderate” supremacists to return them to power and influence. All the “economic stimulus” in the world for Nazis or white supremacists would have never brought them to embrace equality and liberty.

But such nonsensical suggestions are exactly the direction that many seek to take us regarding extremism — as shown by the arguments that there is a “good” (or “reconcilable” Taliban). Such supremacist appeasers seek to deliberately ignore the lessons of history and the logic that any adult living in a 21st century democracy should readily know.

Yet this completely illogical, historically disproven approach is precisely the direction where many in the foreign policy community seek to take us regarding extremism — a direction that we are continuing to see regarding many of most dangerous nations that harbor extremism in the world.

2. The War of Euphemisms (W.O.E., again)

Can you imagine the euphemism masters defining Nazi supremacists as “German nationalists” or defining white supremacists as “racial purity defenders”? In dealing with extremism, it is worse than that. Such appeasers refuse to even acknowledge that the ideology of extremism exists at all.

They start disavowing that extremism exists by seeking to re-label extremism as something more palatable to public, so that their argument to appease and ignore supremacism doesn’t sound quite so absurd. Instead of a war of ideas that would defend the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty, the appeasers pursue a war of euphemisms, to confuse the public and obfuscate on the threat of extremism. Instead of challenging the supremacists, such appeasers have chosen to attack those who would defend human rights instead, with the inane argument that defending inalienable human rights is not “culturally sensitive” to supremacists.

To be more “culturally sensitive,” such appeasers prefer to use such terms as “extremists,” “fundamentalists,” etc. They attempt to argue that extremist activities are actually “anti-Islamic” activities, and that we are really challenged by “takfiri” or “hirabah,” not “jihadists.” They would rather talk about individuals and specific groups, and when such groups have unquestionably shown to be supremacist, then they try to argue that such extremist groups are “regional” as opposed to “transnational.” The last thing they want to do is “generalize” about a larger problem that would point to an ideological struggle, when they can suggest that all the extremist issues in the world are nothing but an endless series of disconnected, “isolated incidents.”

If the appeasers are challenged on this, they seek to prove that they are the only “experts” on such issues, and that anyone without a Ph.D. in Islamic studies working for a Saudi-funded program can’t possible grasp the endless “nuances” involved in fighting “extremism – fundamentalism – whatever euphemism they choose today.” They don’t think it is arrogant in the least to argue that they are sole possessors of knowledge or insight on such issues. The last thing that they want is to dignify mass public concerns about such issues, when clearly they believe public is too ignorant to grasp the obvious lessons from history on this. These imams of euphemisms believe that they have the sole right to declare fatwas on what is and is not a threat to America and human rights.

In 2008, we saw the movement within U.S. government leadership and the foreign policy cliques towards a policy of a “War on Extremism” (W.O.E.), where no matter what happened, those responsible were always “extremists.” In April 2008, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates embraced this idea declaring that “the enemy is extremism.” The group in the National Counter Terrorism Center who circulated a memo in March 2008 that stated when addressing extremist activity, government employees should never use such terms as “jihad,” “mujahedeen,” “caliphate,” or any term linked to Islam was (predictably) the “Extremist Messaging Branch.” None of them were embarrassed that 6 months prior to this, Osama Bin Laden himself came out as being against “extremists” — showing how utterly meaningless the term “extremism” was and remains today. Such a War on Extremism (W.O.E.) is part of a larger War of Euphemisms (W.O.E. again) that has continued into 2009 to try to suppress public debate on extremism and silence anyone who seeks to honestly identify the threat of extremism.

So now in 2009, we have gone beyond the national embarrassment of our leaders and government deliberately ignoring supremacist threats by simply calling them “extremists.”

We have now reached the pathetic state in the War of Euphemisms that our government leaders are listening to those arguing that there is a “good Taliban” and a “bad Taliban,” and incredibly, listening to calls by those who ask American government leaders to accept negotiations with “reconcilable” or “moderate” extremists.

3.  The Nonsense of Negotiating with Supremacists

While many in the West for years have claimed that they “won’t negotiate with terrorists,” negotiating with supremacists is quite a different issue with some government leaders today, especially when they can control the public discussion enough with euphemisms to hide the fact that they are negotiating with supremacists.

But what exactly do you negotiate with supremacists about?  Certainly not ideology, because supremacists are non-negotiable on their anti-freedom ideologies.   So you are only left with negotiating about tactics, which is a particularly dangerous route when you are in denial and unwilling to define the threat and its ideology and unwilling to develop a strategy that addresses the overall ideological threat and enemy.

This remains the position of America’s government leadership when it comes to extremism.   Refusing to acknowledging the ideology of extremism, such American government leadership’s focus jumps from country to country, group to group, situation to situation, throwing money and tactics to try to address the endless actions of extremists’ terrorist and political activities.   A “war of euphemisms” forbids discussion on the “why” or the ideology behind such actions, focusing only on the tactics of the day, and the endless parade of details on “who, what, where, when” — always ignoring “why.”  Such a desperate position of weakness devolves into a mere “whack-a-mole” approach of throwing whatever tactics sound good that day at the latest “crisis.”   Such American governmental leaders are so under the control of “the crises” that they have resorted to discussions on negotiating with extremists, trying any tactic to try to “make things work.”  Moreover, the appeaser influence in the foreign relations community is so pervasive that they have an endless parade of testimony and spin-doctoring of reports on facts about extremism, to ignore history, ignore the 9/11 Commission report, and ignore anything that doesn’t buttress the idea that hand-wringing negotiations with extremism is somehow a good and positive idea.

So what are America’s federal government leaders willing to sacrifice in terms of supremacist tactics to reduce supremacist terrorism?
Equality?  Liberty?  Human rights?  Morality?  Are these nothing more than bargaining chips with supremacists who threaten to use terrorist tactics?

Can you imagine if America’s federal government had decided to choose to negotiate with political “white supremacists” on tactics to stop white supremacist terrorism?  Would it have been acceptable if America’s federal government negotiated with white supremacists to maintain segregated schools, public activities, and businesses, if “political” white supremacist leaders agreed to ask the KKK to stop blowing up black churches and stopped killing civil rights workers?   Would such “peace negotiations” with supremacists have been morally acceptable to a nation committed to equality and liberty?  And is there anyone so unschooled in American history to believe that such negotiations to institutionalize supremacism would have not led to even more supremacists and eventually more terrorism?  In fact, Americans know from history that the Civil War was not enough.  It took 100 years more of struggle to ultimately reach the national ideological confrontation with white supremacism to show the courage of our national convictions, and prove that we are a nation that believes that “all men are created equal.”

Is that commitment and sacrifice for sale now by those who would negotiate with extremists?

Do they, like the infamous Neville Chamberlain, believe that they can trade away land, human rights, hope for oppressed people, by letting supremacists grow in power and influence with the pleading hope that it will mean less terrorist threats for America?   History also shows how those who sought to negotiate with Aryan supremacist Nazis fared, and the global tragic consequences for such moral failures to be responsible for equality and liberty.  History shows that the appeasers of that generation, those who sought “peace for our time” at any price, allowed the Holocaust to happen, and allowed an ideology of supremacism to grow to where it could threaten not only Europe, but also attack the entire world.  Every high school graduate knows this basic lesson in history.

But America’s federal government leaders who seek negotiations with extremists believe none of this history applies, and the lessons learned from those who sacrificed to defend equality and liberty should be ignored.  Moreover, they will insist they are not fighting a threat of “extremists,” but merely a misunderstanding with some “extremists,” “fundamentalists,” “takfiri,” or whatever the euphemism of the day is.    Furthermore, each extremist group is different they argue, with regional issues and grievances, and therefore we should disregard the endless calls for the creation of a global extremist caliphate, instead focusing on “local solutions” for isolated incidents.  Should you point to the obvious, such government leaders will call upon an army of appeasers in the foreign policy community to spin their latest “engagement” report that says so.   Rather than facing the facts, they create their own facts in a growing industry of appeasement that will brook no dissent.

4. We Won’t Take It Anymore – Supremacists and Their Appeasers Will Make Sure of That

Those who support such appeasement of extremism are dependent on the silence of the American public on these outrages.   They feel empowered when they can make such outrageous claims as calling for “reconciliation” with extremists without massive public demand for their resignation or impeachment.  They feel untouchable when they can publish and broadcast reports about a “good Taliban,” without public outcry from our veterans, their families, and the American people.  They are counting on Americans to be so focused on economic and personal crises that they do not have the time, resources, or leadership to rebut their outrageous reports and actions.  They believe the distraction and silence of the American people is our acquiescence and acceptance.

Their house of cards built on appeasing supremacism and “newthink” words such as “good” or “moderate” supremacism is going to fall.  While the stewing outrage of the American public has not yet hit the boiling point, a movement to restore our national responsibility for equality and liberty is on the horizon.   What the appeasers have not yet realized is that there is a growing number of Americans who have had enough, and are working tirelessly in their efforts to regain the leadership of America’s government and restore America’s image to the world as a people responsible for equality and liberty.

The endless series of outrageous activities and comments by those who appease extremism are frustrating to those who are responsible for equality and liberty.  But like Al-Qaeda’s 9/11 attacks on America, the appeasers are also overreaching.  The appeasers have miscalculated on how a reduced focus on Iraq and a greater emphasis on Afghanistan and Pakistan, the homes of the Taliban that aided Al-Qaeda attacks on America, would play to public opinion with calls for appeasement on extremism.  The appeasers have misjudged the influence of UK diplomats calling for supremacist “engagement” versus the numbers of Americans rightly concerned about UK’s history of appeasement of extremism translating into growing threats towards American homeland security.

Disgraces by extremist appeasers involving Pakistan, Afghanistan, and the United Kingdom may begin to lead to the tipping point in driving the America public and other free people to activism.  As CNN trumpets negotiations with the “good Taliban,” the national nausea over appeasers in the mainstream media and in American government is growing, and more and more consciences are being awakened.

Ultimately, this is why supremacists and their appeasers will always fail, and this is why those in support of the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty will always succeed.  As America declared in 1776 in its Declaration of Independence, and as civilized nations agreed 60 years ago with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, equality and liberty are inalienable human rights.  Free people recognize that supremacist ideologies — by opposing equality and liberty —  also oppose humanity itself.  These truths are indeed self-evident, and all supremacist ideologies are dependent on the lie that denies these self-evident truths.

The ever-controlling supremacist ideologies are also dependent on one other factor that will always destroy them… they must always have MORE.  As an ideology that seeks to control every aspect of human life and thought, supremacists must always have MORE.  So in the surrender of Pakistan in implementing strict Sharia law in its northwest, Islamic supremacist Sufi Mohammad was not content – he had to denounce democracy, he was compelled to call for extremist rule over all of the Earth.  This example of the endless demands of Islamic supremacists can be seen also in the history of other supremacists.  The Aryan Nazi supremacists were not just content in controlling all of Germany, then part of Europe, but were compelled to seek nothing less than to dominate the world. The history of American white supremacists shows that they were not content in merely controlling the voting rights of black Americans, or having segregated schools and public facilities, or institutionalizing white supremacism in society and business, they also had to kill black Americans worshipping in their own churches and attack black Americans who dared to seek their civil rights.  Their sick lie of supremacism perverts their humanity — making them nothing more than soulless creatures that live only by the endless destruction, control, and dehumanization of others.   They are truly the dark side of the human experience.  But in their endless demand for MORE, supremacists always sow the seeds of their own destruction, and the disgrace of those who appeased them.

The world is not enough for supremacists – they must own your heart, your mind, your very soul. Their dark lie denying equality and liberty is so huge that they must paint every aspect of the world with their dark lie to prevent even a crack of the light of equality and liberty from shining in and reawakening the memory of humanity’s inalienable rights.   But they will always lose their hopeless battle in denying who and what humanity is – equal and free.   The light of truth will always shine again.

We know how this will ultimately end.  History has shown the answer over and over again.  Supremacists always overreach and destroy themselves.  The words and actions of cowardly supremacist appeasers live on in infamy in history.  Those who defy supremacism are remembered as champions of equality and liberty.

But every day that extremists grow stronger and more powerful, more lives are lost, more people are oppressed, more helpless suffer as victims.

It is not enough to wait for supremacism to ultimately fall.

Those responsible for equality and liberty must demand an end it to it.  This is a responsibility that all free men and women must bravely undertake and carry on the battle for freedom that our forefathers started before us.  It is our turn to carry the torch of truth about humanity’s right to equality and liberty against those who seek to cloak the world in a fog of appeasement and against those who seek to darken the earth with the evil of supremacism.

Will you join those who are responsible for equality and liberty?

Fear No Evil.

[Postscript – see also Sources documents for additional reading and background information.]

Supremacist History Repeating Again

The speaker demanded that their supremacist ideology needed to be accommodated by the government, and called for a “new era.” The speaker said that his people must be allowed to have laws in place to support this supremacist ideology.

Perhaps you think I am referencing the grim situation for human rights in Pakistan, where the Taliban’s push for implementing an extremist version of Sharia law in northwest Pakistan has succeeded in obtaining surrender by the Pakistan government on this. The result is that the people in that part of Pakistan will soon be ruled by an extremist ideology with its own outlook, its own extremist version of Sharia laws, and its own extremist version of “justice.”

Perhaps you think I am remarking on the statements reported on February 18, 2009 in Pakistan by radical extremist Tehreek-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat Muhammadi (TNSM) chief Maulana Sufi Mohammad who attacked democracy stating, “From the very beginning, I have viewed democracy as a system imposed on us by the infidels. Islam does not allow democracy or elections… I believe the Taliban government formed a complete Islamic state, which was an ideal example for other Muslim countries. Had this government remained intact, it could have led to the establishment of similar Islamic governments in many other countries.” This is the same Sufi Mohammad who told news reporters that “democracy is against the teachings of the Holy Quran and Sunnah” and that he “regarded democracy a system of Kufr (unbelief).”

In fact, I am referring to both of these. But I am also referring to another man, at another time, and in another place – who echoed very similar sentiments.

It was February 18, 1939 – seventy years ago – with another supremacist group. Then it was in Czechoslovakia with a Dr. Kundt stating that he represented Germans with his National Socialist party beliefs of Aryan supremacism. You may remember them as the “Nazis.”

Seventy years ago, Dr. Kundt also demanded separate laws defying equality and liberty for his Nazi supremacist group, stating: “Germans must be allowed their own Nazi outlook, their own Nazi laws, their own Nazi habits, and their own Nazi justice. It is high time that these things were done. History does not wait. We, however, march on with the history of the new era, for our leader is Adolf Hitler. His will and his ‘Weltanschauung’ (philosophy) will from today dictate all the plans and arrangements of this house in Prague and will dictate every activity of the Urania.” History would later show the atrocities and evil wrought by allowing such supremacism to grow unchecked. Nazism was a supremacist ideology that sought the destruction of those who would defy it, sought a “final solution” for Jews, and sought to conquer the world as a transnational threat.

The similarities between 1939 and 2009 continue to grow daily.

The muted reaction by many of our government leaders to the latest growth of extremism in the nuclear weapon-armed nation of Pakistan mirrors such tenacious denial by these leaders on extremist views in America and around the world.

Their sickening silence is only exacerbated by their few public statements that demonstrate a shocking ignorance towards human rights and an outrageous contempt for the inalienable human rights of equality and liberty.

In response to the Pakistan surrender to the extremist Taliban’s demands for implementation of an extremist version of Sharia law in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP), Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has merely stated that she wants to see the Pakistan government’s “intention and the actual agreed-upon language.”

Mrs. Clinton wants us to suspend disbelief that she is unaware of the Taliban’s  extremist version of  Sharia law’s intention to suppress the equality and liberty of women, men, and children in Pakistan and around the world. She wants us to believe she doesn’t know about the UN report on growing global extremists’ violence against women. She wants us to believe she doesn’t know about how the Taliban has used their extremist version of Sharia law to justify threatening, murdering, and dumping the bodies of women in Pakistan. She wants us to believe she doesn’t know about the million pregnant women abused in Pakistan every year, or the news media reports of nearly 8,000 cases of abuses against women, including extremist “honor killings,” in Pakistan in 2008.

Just like we are supposed to suspend our disbelief that she is unaware of the Muslim women beaten and murdered in her state of New York — one last week who was beheaded by her husband, the CEO of Bridges TV, whose mission ironically was to “promote moderate Islam.”  Yet even when this woman is killed for such a noble goal, we shrug our shoulders in deliberate denial that there was an extremist ideology perverting her religion used by her own husband to rationalize her murder.

While Mrs. Clinton may want us to suspend disbelief that she is unaware of all these world events as America’s Secretary of State, in fact, we know better. So does she. As U.S. Senator representing New York, she was a co-sponsor on Senate Resolution 711 condemning the death of a 13 year old girl in Somalia last October. The girl was stoned to death for her “crime” of being a rape victim. She was stoned to death by Somalian extremists following an extremist version of Sharia law, stating “We will do what Allah has instructed us,” while 1,000 looked on and watched. This is the same extremist version of Sharia law that Pakistan’s surrender will allow to be imposed on helpless women and children in Pakistan.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also wants us to suspend our disbelief as she speaks to leaders in Indonesia as a fellow “democracy,” when she deliberately ignores that too many of their citizens openly call for extremist violent jihad on other nations, publicly promote and distribute extremist literature and books, hold massive public rallies denouncing democracy and calling for the creation of a global extremist caliphate, and whose extremists behead Christian girls. She is meeting with Indonesia’s so-called “democratic” leaders who deny the existence of the extremist terror group Jemaah Islamiyah in their nation, and who seek to promote extremist finance. She also expects us to ignore the growth of an extremist version of Sharia law throughout Indonesia, and the continuing reports of Indonesian oppression of religious minorities in that “democracy.” Perhaps Mrs. Clinton forgot that democratic nations have democratic values, including honoring equality and liberty.

While Mrs. Clinton claims in Indonesia that “Islam, democracy and modernity cannot only coexist but thrive together,” Pakistan’s advocate for an extremist version of Sharia law, extremist Maulana Sufi Mohammad condemns democracy as un-Islamic and only for the infidel.  And we don’t challenge this.  We just pretend to not have heard it.

But Mrs. Clinton and her State Department have “no comment” on the growth of extremist version of Sharia law in Pakistan or the attacks on democracy by Maulana Sufi Mohammad.

At least, those were the initial comments by Mrs. Clinton’s State Department representative, Gordon Duguid. But then Gordon Duguid decided to defend Pakistan’s surrender to the extremist Taliban, stating: “The Islamic law is within the constitutional framework of Pakistan… I don’t know that is particularly an issue for anyone outside of Pakistan to discuss.”

Do extremists merely seek imposition of an extremist version of Sharia only in Pakistan, Somalia, and Indonesia?  Hardly.  Such extremists seek to conquer the entire Earth to submit to their supremacism – Asia, Africa, Europe, the United Kingdom, and North America.

As the Pakistan Daily Times reports, Maulana Sufi Mohammad’s goals for implementing an extremist version of Sharia are nothing less than seeking “supremacy of Islam over the entire world.”

But the U.S. State Department has “no comment” on this, nor do they think it is “an issue for anyone outside of Pakistan to discuss.”

Hillary Clinton’s State Department is continuing a craven position of “hear no evil, see no evil” regarding extremism that is becoming entrenched within appeasers among foreign policy cliques in Washington DC. This community of the blind and deaf are the same amoral individuals that have included Obama campaign foreign policy advisor Dennis Ross, who called for negotiations with the extremist Muslim Brotherhood back in September 2008.

The most disturbing report is by the Daily Telegraph and it states that the “US privately backs Pakistan’s ‘Sharia law for peace’ deal with Taliban.” The report quotes anonymous “American officials in Islamabad” that view surrender on an extremist version of Sharia law in Pakistan’s northwest as a possible tactic to divide members within the Taliban. The report continues that such surrender of human dignity and rights to extremism “reflected the ‘smart power’ thinking outlined by Hillary Clinton.” We can only hope that amoral tactians are not consciously empowering extremists with the delusion that sacrificing the helpless in Pakistan will satisfy extremists’ goals for world domination.

Does America’s State Department think that appeasing anti-human rights and anti-democracy extremists will yield “peace in our time”? Are American politicians so historically ignorant that they believe a policy of appeasement is “smart power”?

Whether such inaction on extremism is due to amorality, ignorance, or blindness – the responsibility does not change.

Pretending to be blind and deaf about extremism does not excuse their responsibility for its appeasement – any more than being blind and deaf about the Aryan supremacist Nazis in 1939 ended responsibility for its appeasement then. History shows the consequences of those failures.

This is the same U.S. government leadership whose president is the greatest beneficiary in America’s defiance against supremacism in history, who took his presidential vows on Lincoln’s Bible, and who spoke at Lincoln’s memorial – mere steps away from the words in marble that “all men are created equal.” Does his government view that equality and liberty are not a sufficient priority to defy extremism?

If President Barack Obama and his cabinet are responsible for equality and liberty, then it is time for them to wake up to the threat of extremism. Right now. It is 2009… the 1939 of our generation and it is time to confront extremism as its cancer grows around the world, and as shown by the recent “Homegrown Violent Extemism” video – in camps around the United States.

Will a future generation look back on the craven positions by today’s leaders on extremism like we do today on those who denied the threat of Nazism’s Aryan supremacism in 1939? Instead of saying “it is just like 1939,” will they say instead “it is just like 2009”? That is a legacy that our generation must prevent, and a future that we must take control of… before it takes control of us.

The 3 AM telephone call is ringing tonight in Washington DC. Will neither Barack Obama nor Hillary Clinton pick up the telephone and wake up — as equality and liberty itself are imperiled?

The emergency call on the threat to equality and liberty must be answered – by our government leaders – and by each of us as free men and women. We must heed the call – right now – no matter how inconvenient, no matter how tired we are, and no matter how frightening the responsibility is. That is what it means to be responsible for equality and liberty. That is what it means to be the home of the brave.

We have received the call to action as free people to be responsible for equality and liberty by defying extremism in America and around the world. Now it is time for us to act to get the message out to our fellow Americans and our leaders.

It is our judgment, our courage, and our wisdom today that we must prove in defending equality and liberty, and to show that…

We Must Fear No Evil.

Let us instead have ONE standard for Universal Human Rights – a Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Let us be Responsible for Equality And Libertyfor all.