The Strategic and Constitutional Problems With Trying to Establish an Acceptable Islam
Writing in The New York Times, NYU law professor Samuel J. Rascoff, former director of intelligence analysis at the NYPD, questions the government's "dubious enterprise of trying to shape the beliefs of American Muslims" in an effort to prevent terrorism:
The problem is that when American officials intervene in Islamic teachings — interpreting them to believers in a national-security context and saying which are or are not acceptable — they create tensions, both legal and strategic.
The strategic problem is easier to see: Is the government a credible authority on Islamic interpretation? Based on the results of comparable efforts in Britain, the answer is a resounding no. Simply put, young Muslim men in the thrall of radical teachings will not embrace a more pacific theology because the F.B.I. tells them to, any more than Catholic bishops would have yielded to Mr. Obama's plan to mandate coverage of contraceptives at Catholic hospitals if he had invoked canon law to defend his position.
Then there's the legal problem. Constitutionally speaking, a government official who sets out to determine what a contested concept within Islam means, or which imams have the right to speak for a particular community, would be in danger of transgressing one of the cardinal tenets of the Establishment Clause: the secular state shall not become an arbiter of religious content.
Rascoff argues that "countering radical religious ideology is on much more solid constitutional — and strategic — footing if the heavy lifting is done not by the government but by grass-roots organizations that are grounded in civil society or in religious communities."
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Those ragfags better wake up and smell what Barack is cookin'.
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It was a nice gesture, but US officials should have never labeled Islam a religion of peace.
Get out the way government and let the people decide what it is. We ask you to step in went things turn violent though.
They should not have cowered after using the term "crusade" either.
Apparently or government did not cower in action. Osama bin Laden and so many others are dead.
Lyle|2.22.12 @ 12:07PM|#
Apparently or government did not cower in action.
"...and god, and babies, and USA! Football! We ar the freedoms and osama feeds the fishes~!"
Remember, folks, it's pronounced 'suck-y'.
They should not have cowered after using the term "crusade" either.
You know who else shouldn't have cowered? Comedy Central.
You know who else shouldn't have cowered?
You're doing it wrong; I've fixed it for you.
So, John, what's your take on this?
lol
Who gets to decide the definition of radical for this one?
All Catholics are radical.
Wait, complications arise when the Federal Government takes action!?
SAY IT AIN'T SO!
"Constitutionally speaking, a government official who sets out to determine what a contested concept within Islam means, or which imams have the right to speak for a particular community, would be in danger of transgressing one of the cardinal tenets of the Establishment Clause: the secular state shall not become an arbiter of religious content."
YOU THINK?????
the secular state shall not become an arbiter of religious content
Fuck. that. shit. Church of England, baby! Now where's my wife?
I thought we had assassin drones for this Shit.
My advice to NYU law professor Samuel J. Rascoff 'Think' again you are 'dangerously' wrong.
"Samuel J. Rascoff I appreciate you are trying to do good but you are dangerously wrong."
http://citizensfirstasnau.blog.....u-are.html
Here's the only thing the gubmint needs to say to Muslims, "Believe whatever the fuck you want to believe, live however the fuck you want to live, but you are absolutely not allowed to initiate the use of force, threats of force or fraud". Basically the same thing they should say to everybody.
...cuz dat's our jerb.