Latest Updates: 9/11 RSS

  • johnpi 10:35 am on December 30, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, , , , , , , , , , , , ,

    Abdulmutallab praised the 9/11 attacks as a teenager.

    The bomber also praised the 9/11 terrorist attacks when he was a teenager, telling one schoolfriend they were “an act of war”. The unnamed friend said: “We were talking about 9/11. I was saying under no circumstances could it ever be OK to kill all those innocent people. He was much more equivocal.

    “He called 9/11 an act of war – American troops were on Saudi soil and had humiliated Muslim countries so these actions might be necessary. That’s the only time I had an argument with him.”

    US troops were invited into Saudi Arabia by the royal family. There is precedent for making military alliances with Western nations. No less an authority than Ibn Abd al-Wahhab (Mr. Wahhabism) and Ibn Saud entered into an offensive alliance with the English to help bring down the Ottoman empire, since it was unconscionable to them as ethnic supremacists that a Turk could be considered equal to an Arab, let alone govern Arabs. “Abd al-Wahhab was, in part reacting to the old ethnocentric belief tht only Arabs can represent the one true and authentic Islam.”

    You can’t condemn one and not the other without being a hypocrite, but hypocrisy was never a problem for Wahhabis:

    While consistently condemning non-Muslim influences and rejecting any form of cooperation with the West, in reality the Wahhabis were incited and supported by English colonialists to rebel against the Ottomans, which effectively meant that Wahhabis sided with non-Muslim Englishmen against their Muslim Ottoman enemies. Moreover, while condemning all forms of nationalism as an evil Western invention, in reality Wahhabism was a pro-Arab nationalistic movement that rejected Turkish dominance over Arabs under the guise of defending the one true Islam.

     
  • johnpi 10:34 pm on December 4, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11

    A CBC documentary investigates the theories of those that doubt the official version of 9/11.

    Meanwhile, alert reporters are doing their part to get at the truth of the matter. A correction printed in the Washington Post:

    A Nov. 26 article in the District edition of Local Living incorrectly said a Public Enemy song declared 9/11 a joke. The song refers to 911, the emergency phone number.

    Citizen journalists on the internets can check the original sources and make their own analysis independent from the hacks, thank goodness.

     
  • johnpi 6:42 pm on November 7, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11

    Town won’t call 9/11 killers ‘Muslim terrorists.’

    A memorial to honor a Sept. 11 victim from a small northwestern Connecticut town has been halted by the unexpected conflict arising from his father’s insistence it say his son was murdered by “Muslim terrorists.”

    Town officials in Kent are balking, saying it would be inappropriate to single out a religious group in a project on town property and paid for with taxpayers’ money. The memorial plaque to be erected outside the town hall is on indefinite hold.

    Peter Gadiel is criticizing town leaders for being too politically correct, and says he’s frustrated about what he calls a growing trend across the country to soften the reality of the Sept. 11 attacks by not mentioning a word about terrorism on victims’ memorials.

    “Ordinarily I would not want a reference to his murder on his memorial, but there seems to be an effort to whitewash what happened that day,” said Gadiel, a 61-year-old retired real estate investor.

     
  • johnpi 10:18 pm on October 9, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, , , ,

    South Carolina senator moves to block Obama from trying 9/11 suspects in US.

    Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., is trying to prevent the Obama administration from holding criminal trials in civilian courts for the alleged Sept. 11 plotters instead of bringing them before military commissions.

    Graham, who helped craft the 2006 law that established the military commissions, said Friday that he’d attached an amendment to an appropriations bill that would prohibit the Obama administration from spending money on the prosecution and trial of the accused terrorists before U.S. civilian federal judges.

    “Khalid Sheik Mohammed needs to be tried in a military tribunal,” Graham said. “He’s not a common criminal. He took up arms against the United States.”

    The Obama admiisitration response:

    “It is the administration view that when you direct violence on innocent civilians in the continental United States, it may be appropriate that that person be brought to justice in a civilian public forum in the continental United States,” Johnson said then.

     
  • johnpi 7:24 pm on September 24, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11,

    FBI pays wrongly detained Egyptian man $250,000.

    The FBI paid $250,000 this week to an Egyptian man detained when a pilot’s aviation radio was found after the Sept. 11 attacks in his hotel room overlooking the World Trade Center, his lawyer said Thursday.

    A judge approved the payment to Abdallah Higazy in July and the money was delivered this week, according to the lawyer, Jonathan S. Abady.

    Higazy, 38, had sued the FBI, saying an FBI agent screamed at him, lied to him and threatened to endanger his family, leading him to offer several ways the radio got in his room and causing him to be unjustly criminally charged and imprisoned for 34 days.

     
  • razib, murtad fitri 12:55 pm on September 24, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11

    No consensus on who was behind Sept 11: global poll (from 2008):

    800px-911worldopinionpoll_S.png
     
  • johnpi 5:50 am on September 24, 2009 | 4 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, ,

    Terror probe highlights police-Muslim tensions.

    The arrest of a Queens imam who investigators had considered a trusted partner was a blow in more ways than one for law enforcement.
    ….

    Officers visit mosques, attend national Muslim conventions and very publicly celebrate Muslim holidays. Earlier this month, New York Police Department Commissioner Raymond Kelly led the annual NYPD Ramadan program for clerics and others at One Police Plaza.

    Yet, in many cases, aggressive outreach hasn’t been enough to overcome deep Muslim mistrust of authorities — fears that have been exacerbated in cases in which law enforcement has placed informants inside mosques to build a case. Muslims widely fear that the innocent will be caught up in the net police have set for terrorists, and some struggle with just how forthcoming they should be.

    And this:

    There is also a persistent belief among some Muslims that no one of their faith could have carried out the Sept. 11 hijackings. Muslims who hold this view believe there is no threat of extremism in their community and therefore no need to work with law enforcement.

    Several national Muslim groups have tried to counter this attitude. As just one example, the Muslim Public Affairs Council created a “National Grassroots Campaign to Fight Terrorism,” several years ago aimed largely at mosque leaders. Still, in a 2007 Pew Research Center survey, 60 percent of Muslim Americans said they did not believe that Arabs were behind the attacks.

     
  • aziz 9:00 am on September 14, 2009 | 12 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, ,

    I argue that 9-11 was indeed an outlier, and propose the idea we don’t need a war on terror per se anymore. Patr one of a series of posts on the “post 9-11″ world.

     
  • johnpi 9:43 am on September 12, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11,

    MSNBC has a very nice article on the New York City debut of Wajahat Ali’s play ‘Domestic Crusaders’ about how 9/11 impacted the American Muslim community.

    This play has come a long way:

    For years, Ali thought he might never get to stage the play at all. With many theater companies and producers turning him down, he had to be content with occasional readings — funded by his parents — in restaurants around Berkeley.

    There’s video at the MSNBC site too.

     
  • johnpi 6:28 pm on August 29, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, , , , , , volunteerism

    Obama has called for a national day of service on 9/11, to initiate a positive tradition on the anniversary.

    President Barack Obama is asking Americans to volunteer Sept. 11, making this year’s anniversary of the terrorism attacks the first National Day of Service and Remembrance, organizers announced Thursday.

    “Our ultimate goal is to leave a positive legacy that honors the victims and those who rose in service,” said David Paine, president of MyGoodDeed, one of the organizations responsible for the event.

    Over at the conservative American Spectator magazine, a right-wing pundit is complaining that Obama is undoing a “‘day of fear’ that helps Republicans.”

    Elsewhere, Fire Dog Lake frontpage blogger Tbogg takes one of his commenters to task for some right-wing craziness:

    (More …)

     
  • johnpi 11:38 am on August 15, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, , ,

    Muslim ex-inmate settles prison treatment lawsuit.

    A former inmate who accused federal prison workers in Illinois of defiling his Quran and torturing him with a nightstick when he complained has settled his civil rights lawsuit for $48,000, one of his attorneys said Thursday.
    ….

    Shaheed, 50, was a practicing Muslim imprisoned at the federal lockup in Marion from April 1996 to early October 2005, according to the 2007 lawsuit. Specifics about his convictions were not immediately available.

    After the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, Muslim prisoners “suffered much mistreatment by guards and employees at the prison,” the lawsuit claimed without detailing those other abuses.

     
  • johnpi 6:56 pm on June 24, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, ,

    Saudi royal family linked to Al Qaeda, say lawyers for 9/11 victims.

    Documents gathered by lawyers for the families of Sept. 11 victims provide new evidence of extensive financial support for Al Qaeda and other extremist groups by members of the Saudi royal family, but the material may never find its way into court because of legal and diplomatic obstacles.

     
  • johnpi 7:29 pm on April 1, 2009 | 14 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, Dunkin Donuts, pork

    Lawsuit against Muslim Dunkin Donuts franchise owner gives insight into how attitudes toward Islam in US changed after 9/11 (unless you think the following is an unrelated coincidence).

    (More …)

     
  • johnpi 3:35 pm on February 17, 2009 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11,

    Scientologists blame psychiatry for 9/11.

    Larry Byrnes, the host of the “No Drug Show,” and his guest David Figueroa, claim that psychiatrists knowingly turn people into “killing machines” using drugs, and that in bin Laden’s case it was Ayman al-Zawahiri, his second in command, who led him astray as his psychiatrist. In fact, Ayman al-Zawahiri is an eye surgeon.

     
  • thabet 2:28 pm on October 22, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, , ,

    The flip side of this debate: A former head of the MI5 says the response to the September 11 terrorist attacks was a “huge overreaction” and notes that foreign policy does, indeed, play its part.

     
  • thabet 6:47 pm on September 18, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, , graphic novels,

    FP Passport has some excerpts of the graphic novel After 9/11: America’s War on Terror.

    From the few pages shown by FP Passport, I see there is no mention of those pesky Afghan civilians who were being killed right from the beginning of US-led operations.

     
  • thabet 12:32 pm on September 14, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, , , ,

    The lies told in the run up to the Iraq invasion are the best arguments against 9/11 (and 7/7) conspiracy theories.

     
  • aziz 1:24 pm on September 12, 2008 | 13 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, ,

    Umm Zaid writes a courageous essay exhorting the muslim community to Do Something. I respond to her at City of Brass.

     
  • aziz 7:26 am on September 11, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, ,

    the Silence Libel: muslims keep condemning terror, but no one notices.

     
  • aziz 6:25 am on September 11, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11

    Riffing off thabet’s earlier post, the graphic in the poll of world opinion really is astonishing:

    World opinion about 9/11

    World opinion about 9/11

    source

     
  • thabet 3:55 am on September 11, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, conspiracy threory, ,

    Not only Egyptians believe in 9/11 conspiracy theories: It seems Egyptians are not alone: nearly a quarter of Germans polled think the US government had a role in 9/11.

    I found the results from China, Indonesia and the Ukraine interesting — a significant number (a majority in China and Indonesia) answered don’t know. Don’t know or don’t care?

    In Nigeria (a country with a large Muslim population), however, there is no such desire for conspiracies. (Although, of course, we aren’t given a Muslim/Christian breakdown.)

    Lots of people will blame education. Possibly. But more literate, numerate, ‘advanced’, ‘modern’ populations were duped by Tony Blair’s propaganda pieces. I think it will be a mix of education, access to various forms of media and trust in government*.

    (Via FP Passport.)

    *Healthy trust demands healthy scepticism.

     
  • muse 2:20 am on September 9, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11,

    NYTimes article on the popular view in the Muslim world that 9/11 could not have been masterminded by Arabs (read: we’re just not that smart!).

    I’d say the article is pretty accurate in capturing the popular sentiment. I know I hear these comments if the topic comes up in my family; they are just unwilling to accept that Muslims could be solely responsible. All sorts of theories come up when Bin Laden is discussed, and almost nobody believes that he is still alive, let alone that the US is still looking for him.

     
  • aziz 5:13 am on September 7, 2008 | 2 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, ,

    John McCain and Barack Obama will have a joint appearance at Ground Zero in New York City to observe the anniversary of 9/11.

     
  • thabet 11:39 pm on August 7, 2008 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: 9/11, ,

    “You are a union that is proud of achieving a Muslim holiday and prayer room?” one person wrote the union. “A union in the U.S.A., a country based on Christianity. You call yourselves Americans? Have you forgotten 9/11?”

    Related: A post from Aziz on this story

     
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