• In context: 'Some people did something' says the terrorist Democrat fro

    From Muslim Lies Matter...@21:1/5 to All on Tue Apr 16 13:26:00 2019
    XPost: alt.terrorism.world-trade-center, sac.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh XPost: mn.politics

    President Donald Trump, other Republicans and the New York Post
    have seized on a line from a speech given by U.S. Rep. Ilhan
    Omar, D-Minn., several weeks ago that they say diminishes 9/11.

    Omar was speaking about discrimination faced by Muslims and
    their responsibility to stand up for their own rights. She spoke
    on March 23, 2019, at the Council of American-Islamic Relations
    of Greater Los Angeles' fourth annual Valley Banquet in Woodland
    Hills, California. The line — that CAIR "recognized that some
    people did something and that all of us were starting to lose
    access to our civil liberties" — is about two-thirds of the way
    into the speech.

    Here is Omar’s speech, transcribed from YouTube. She began by
    asking for the stage lights to be adjusted.

    "Salam alaikum (hello), everyone. I also want the light so I
    could see your beautiful faces. I am truly, truly, truly honored
    for the opportunity to be here with all of you. It's been a
    really hard week for the Muslim community. And I feel extremely
    lucky to to be here in California with all of you — fighting for
    justice, for equality, for the right for us to equally exist in
    this country.

    "Many people expect our community to feel like it needs to hide
    every time something happens. But repeatedly, we have shown them
    that we are not to be bullied. We are not to be threatened. We
    are not to be terrorized. We are strong, resilient and we will
    always show up to be ourselves, because we know we have a right
    to a dignified existence and a dignified life.

    "The other thing that is exciting to me to be in this room is
    that there are very fascinating people outside, who, for so many
    years, have spoken about an Islam that is oppressive, an Islam
    that lessens and isolates its women, and today they gather
    outside to protest a Muslim woman who is in Congress. I mean the
    irony, the irony in that is very entertaining to me.

    "I know many of them drove miles to get here, spent a lot of
    energy and resources and money to purchase the signs that they
    have. But I don't think any of them realize that people like
    myself and many of the people in this room can care less about
    what they have to say, because we know who we are and where we
    belong and what we stand for.

    "So we are coming off a tragic, tragic nightmare that has
    happened to Muslims in New Zealand. Many of us know that this is
    not a one-off incident. Many of us were not shocked or
    surprised. Many of us were kind of holding our breath for a
    really long time thinking when will something like this happen.
    Because many of us have experienced threats in our mosques, in
    our schools, even for our individual leaders. Many of us have
    witnessed bombings of mosques. Many of us have seen mosques set
    on fire. Many people, a few years ago, watched in horror as
    gunmen showed up to Irving, Texas, at a mosque, threatening
    Muslims. So, we all, we all kind of knew that this was happening.

    "But the reason I think that many of us knew that this was going
    to get worse is that we finally have a leader, a world leader,
    in the White House, who publicly says Islam hates us, who fuels
    hate against Muslims, who thinks it is okay to speak about a
    faith and a whole community in a way that is dehumanizing,
    vilifying, and doesn't understand — or at least makes us want to
    think that he doesn't understand — the consequences that his
    words might have.

    "Some people like me know that he understands the consequences.
    He knows that there are people that he can influence to threaten
    our lives, to diminish our presence.

    "But what we know, and what Islam teaches us, and what I always
    say, is that love trumps hate. Every time we feel threatened, we
    show up with love, and others stand with us in solidarity. We
    have seen that with the Muslim ban, a very hateful policy that
    has now been fully implemented, one that is going to leave a
    stain in our nation's history. When the ban was first announced
    Muslims across this country rushed out to stand against it and
    everyone else in all of our communities showed up alongside us.

    "We also know that when this last shooting happened, even though
    leaders, non-Muslim leaders, said people should not go to
    Jumu'ah (Friday) prayers, people should not show up at their
    mosques, we knew, we knew that the only way we will continue is
    for all of us to show up. And even if you were not planning on
    going to Jumu'ah prayer that Friday, you were going to Jumu'ah
    prayer. And we knew that others within our communities will also
    show up. Because that is how it works. Once you are willing to
    stand up for yourself, once you recognize what your rights are,
    what you should be entitled to, then others will show up for you.

    "Liberation, it's not an external thing. It's an internal thing.
    People always say to me, how have you gotten empowered? And I
    say I was born this way. It is not about how others make us
    feel. It is what we tell ourselves, that we are worthy. So when
    you know, as a Muslim, that advancing justice is very inherent
    in you, when you know as a Muslim our faith’s initial
    foundations were built by a prophet who was vilified, had stones
    and fruit and all kind of things thrown at him, a prophet who
    had to make a pilgrimage and leave his home, then you know that
    when Ilhan is facing some controversy, that that is not
    something to be afraid of.

    "We might be headed to the promised land of speaking the truth
    and finding our external liberty once we internally liberate
    ourselves. Muslims for a really long time in this country have
    been told that there is a privilege that we are given and that
    it might be taken away. We are told that we should be
    appropriate. We should go to school, get an education, raise our
    children, and not bother anyone, not make any kind of noise.
    Don't make anyone uncomfortable. Be a good Muslim.

    "But no matter how much we have tried to be the best neighbor,
    people have always worked on finding a way to not allow for
    every single civil liberty to be extended to us. (Aside) You can
    clap for that. So the truth is you can go to school and be a
    good student. You can listen to your dad and mom and become a
    doctor. You can have that beautiful wedding that makes Mom and
    Dad happy. You can buy that beautiful house. But none of that
    stuff matters if you one day show up to the hospital, and your
    wife, or maybe yourself, is having a baby and you can't have the
    access that you need because someone doesn’t recognize you as
    fully human. It doesn't matter how good you were if you can't
    have your prayer mat and take your 15-minute break to go pray in
    a country that was founded on religious liberty.

    "No matter how good you are, if you one day find yourself in a
    school where other religions are talked about, but when Islam is
    mentioned, we are only talking about terrorists and if you say
    something you are sent to the principal's office.

    "So to me, I say, raise hell, make people uncomfortable. Because
    here's the truth: For too long we have lived with the discomfort
    of being a second-class citizen, and, frankly, I'm tired of it,
    and every single Muslim in this country should be tired of it.

    "CAIR was founded after 9/11 because they recognized that some
    people did something and that all of us were starting to lose
    access to our civil liberties. So you can't just say that today
    someone is looking at me strange, that I am going to try to make
    myself look pleasant. You have to say this person is looking at
    me strange, I am not comfortable with it, I am going to go talk
    to them and ask them why. Because that is a right you have.
    (Editor's note: CAIR was actually founded in 1994.)

    "So there are, there are people, and Hassan (Hassan Shibly,
    executive director of CAIR Florida, spoke the same evening) is
    on the right track, it's always good, right? I say you can't
    hate up close. You can't hate up close. Anytime you have an
    opportunity to go talk to someone, the chances of them hating
    you lessens. So that is a practice we should all adopt.

    "But the one thing that is always been very fascinating to me —
    and Hassan and I were talking about this before I came down here
    — is that there are always these folks who have ayat (Koranic
    verses) prepared in their head, as part of their talking points,
    and I don't think, I mean I'm not a hafiz (someone who has
    memorized the Koran), I don't know. I don't know what chapter
    4:135 says in the Koran. Any Muslim in here know what that is?
    No? Okay … that's expected, I suppose, but it goes right into
    they're always quoting these ayat numbers, and I'm like, I
    really don't know, let me get back to you. I don't even know how
    to google that yet. But there was a woman — again we're not
    going to mention — and she was talking to Hassan outside. He
    went to go talk to her, because Hassan is brave like that. And
    so in their conversation she's like saying all of these chapter
    numbers, and ayat numbers, verse numbers, and chapter numbers,
    and I thought about (it), and I said, you know, we should like
    just kind of do that. I started a practice and I'm hoping
    Muslims who were elected around the country would just do this.
    I tweet out verses of the Koran. I say salam alaikum (peace),
    and alhamdulillah (praise be God) and I'll tweet back at people
    astaghfirullah (sorry). I mean, I'm trying to make sure that
    people are googling these words. I never really put the
    definition there, because I want them to get comfortable as they
    google what what they mean. So, I was thinking that I should
    think about maybe some ayats that kind of explain why someone
    like me exists.

    "To me it is really important because there is not enough
    conversation rooted in the fact that advocacy, fighting for
    justice, standing up for what is right, is very inherently
    Islamic.

    "So for those of you who want to google this ayat, it's in
    chapter 4:135. And I'll paraphrase it: This ayat says that as
    Muslims we are called on, right, to stand up for justice and to
    speak the truth, even if it is against ourselves, our parents,
    and our close relatives.

    "If Hassan was up here, he would probably say in Arabic, but I'm
    a work in progress, so that's all I’ve got.

    "And so when people you know are having these conversations with
    me and they say you know, Ilhan, why do you criticize Muslims
    who were doing something? What is your problem with Arab
    countries, why are you always talking about this particular
    country and you're not talking about that particular country? My
    choice of a country to talk about, it's not my preference of
    country, it is based on what country is violating basic human
    rights.

    "So it doesn't matter if that country is being run by my father,
    my brother, my sister, I will still criticize that country
    because I know every country is capable of living up to their
    best. Every leader has the ability to lead with compassion, to
    lead with justice. So it is important for us to recognize that
    and to make sure that we're not only holding people that we
    don't like accountable. We must also hold those that we love,
    have shared values with, accountable.

    "And so I am again very grateful to have the opportunity to be
    in a room like this, with all of you. As an elected Muslim in
    Congress I feel the weight of responsibility that I have, to not
    live up to the name of being a Muslim but live up to the ideals
    of what it means to be a Muslim.

    "And I know as an American member of Congress, I have to make
    sure that I am living up to the ideals of fighting for liberty
    and justice. Those are very much rooted in the reason why my
    family came here.

    "And so, regardless of how hard Washington might get for me, or
    your neighborhoods might get for you, you have to always
    remember that we have a mission as humans to love one another,
    to care for our neighbors, to raise compassionate children, and
    to fully, every single day, show up and make sure that we are
    furthering justice.

    "Thank you so much for having me, and have a great night."

    Go choke on your own vomit you sick cunt.

    https://www.politifact.com/truth-o- meter/article/2019/apr/14/context-some-people-did-something/

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