If Romney Panders, It’s Hasta La Vista Mitt!

Without a doubt, this presidential election will be close. 
Sure, some in fantasyland have already coronated Mitt Romney, predicting a November romp. But in reality, the race will come down to a few swing states where Hispanics will be a — and possibly the — crucial voting bloc.
As of now, Romney’s Latino support is abysmal, as he trails President Obama by over 40 points. 
Despite this, Mitt’s strategy is to pander to Latinos. Rather than addressing them as Americans instead of Hispanics, he thinks he can curry favor by acting as if he is in touch with “their” needs. Here’s a newsflash, Mitt: “their” needs are the same as everyone’s.
No mas, Senor Romney, por favor!

* * *
Maybe Mitt shouldn’t be catering to Hispanics at all.
If he really wants to become President, he should run as a proud and unapologetic Republican, speaking from the heart — in language to which voters can relate — to everyone, not placating specific audiences by telling them what they want to hear.  If Romney is to be successful, he must articulate why his Party offers the best solutions, not just for a brighter America, but a better life for all its citizens.
Most Americans have common interests, and share common problems. Who doesn’t want affordable health care, first-rate education, common sense immigration reform, and a booming economy? The candidates stand in stark contrast on these issues, with the President believing government knows bests, while Romney feels (theoretically, anyway) that individuals are most qualified to make decisions. 
America was founded by people pulling themselves up by their own bootstraps, where investing blood, sweat and tears was, and still is, richly rewarded.  Since the Republican Party is more closely aligned with that philosophy, Romney should have a leg up.  But rather than capitalizing on that advantage, he too often punts by trying to be all things to all people. And pandering to the Latinos is just the latest example.
Instead of trying to speak Spanish, pretending Florida Senator Marco Rubio may be his Veep choice, or eating at a Cuban restaurant, Romney should be explaining how the Republican Party offers real solutions to the problems all Americans face — Hispanics included.
Just as important, he needs to address his own Party’s failures the last time it held power, and do what his predecessors did not: lead by fostering competition and placing decision making power back where it belongs— with the people.  
* * *
Incomprehensibly, Romney refuses to answer whether he would repeal Obama’s executive order of halting deportations of undocumented young people who came to the U.S. before age 16.  In typical Romney fashion, Mitt has alienated all sides because he won’t commit to a position, let alone stick to it. 
As he is finding out, that’s not a problem with just the Latino community.  It’s a disaster with everyone.  Obama may not have delivered much Hope and Change, but voters will reward a politician for trying to make a difference versus one afraid to take a stand.
Since Romney’s campaign thus far has been more gaffe and flip-flop than substance, and Obama is sitting on a billion dollar war chest, Mitt will have to turn on his “A” game quickly. How? By aggressively making the case:
-That building a border wall to stop illegal aliens — and terrorists with possible WMDs — is in no way a racist or “disenfranchising” act, but a smart, common sense measure. Protecting the jobs, wages and security of citizens and legal immigrants alike is a policy most voters will find favorable.  Articulated correctly, upholding the rule of law and respecting legal immigrants who pursue the path to citizenship the right way, is a winner.  And he should dispel the myth that all voting Latinos oppose border walls, deportations, and illegal immigrant crackdowns, since, in many respects, that community stands the most to gain by backing compassionate but tough immigration reforms.
Note to Mitt: It would also help to point out that the United States opens its arms to more immigrants every year than every other country combined, and that a sound immigration policy benefits Hispanics, blacks, whites, women — in short, everyone.
-That government-mandated health insurance places bureaucrats in charge of life and death decisions, and that meaningful reform can only be achieved by allowing insurance to be bought across state lines (creating competition and slashing premiums), reducing the frivolous lawsuits favored by trial lawyers, and eliminating health care accounts with a “use it or lose it” policy. 
Note to Mitt: Everyone benefits from free market-oriented health care reform. 
-That the way to boost the economy is not by growing government and incurring more debt, but by reviving American manufacturing, made possible by having the world’s cheapest energy. Solution: responsibly open the planet’s largest oil and natural gas reserves, which happen to be in America. 
Note to Mitt: Everyone benefits from cheap domestic energy and a booming manufacturing economy.
-That the best way to optimize America’s productivity is by having the most educated workforce in the world. But since the U.S. ranks near the bottom in math, science, reading and literacy compared to its global competitors (despite record spending), Mitt needs to break the logjam in attaining educational excellence by instituting school choice, expanding charter schools, and allowing the private sector to have a greater role in educating our children — indeed our future.
Note to Mitt: Everyone benefits from improving America’s failing educational system.
* * *
It’s no secret that some of the poorest, least educated and unemployed segments of the population are within the Latino community.  Republicans who spew the same meaningless rhetoric at Hispanics, while failing to address these issues, look foolish and out-of-touch, since it is both patronizing and insulting.  And that is precisely why the GOP continues to see its standing with them plummet.
Should Romney break the mold, serious progress could be made. While he still wouldn’t win a majority in this election, he could at least stop the hemorrhaging.  Straight talk about how the Democratic Party sold out these folks long ago, takes them for granted in every election, and does not possess the vision necessary to lift them to greater heights, would prove infinitely more effective and pay huge dividends in the future.
Given the electoral power of the Latinos, will Romney do what it takes to win them over? 
If he doesn’t, it’s hasta la vista, Mitt!

People Whose Cars You Shouldn’t Steal

Kalvin Hulvey, 35, stole a 1997 Buick LeSabre belonging to Jeremy Penny in Tulsa, OK, according to police.

Penny, a 6-5, 240 pound rodeo worker, who was working in a field with his father saw him. Dad also does rodeo work. They hopped into a truck and gave chase rounding the little dogie up at an intersection. Penny pulled Hulvey from the car while Dad hog-tied him and suspended him from a fence where he hung until police arrived.
Hulvey who has convictions for burglary and drug possession was charged with larceny of a motor vehicle.

Fallout Camden

Every now and then our region catches the eye of the world albeit usually not in the way we’d like.

The U.K. Daily Mail, yesterday, June 26, carried a story about Camden, N.J with the headline Camden, city of ruins: Depressing images of once-thriving metropolis reduced to decaying, crime-ridden rubble
And to think that it wasn’t that long ago I was making fun of Detroit.
Tip to video game makers: forget places like Las Vegas and Washington D.C., set the next Fallout game in Camden.
Democrats are to America like atom bombs are to Japan.

Beware Of Lyme Disease

Summer is the height of tick season, and residents are reminded to take precautions to avoid exposure to deer ticks, the carriers of Lyme disease, says State Rep. Jim Cox (R-129).
Those who spend a lot of time outdoors in grassy or wooded areas are advised to:
  • Wear long pants, long sleeves and socks while hiking, mowing the lawn or spending time in the woods or other tick habitat.
  • Spray tick repellant on shoes and clothing.
  • Check for ticks on the body after outdoor exposure.
Lyme disease often first appears as an inflamed red ring around the site of a tick bite, and if untreated can cause serious inflammation and pain that can greatly impact quality of life.

Advice For Catholics

Tea Party activist Bob Guzzardi says I think every Church bulletin should contain an ad “Catholic Business Owner. Why would you send your  money to Harrisburg when you could send it to a school where it can do some good.

Couldn’t agree more, Bob.

Spanier Gets National Security Gig

Spanier Gets National Security Gig — Graham Spanier, the sexual adventurer who presided over Penn State for 16 years and thought it “humane” to refrain from reporting to police that one-time football assistant coach Jerry Sandusky was molesting children, appears to have been rehabilitated.

At least in the eyes of Washington.
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports that he was hired by the federal government in April for an “unspecified project in national security

 

Spanier Gets National Security Gig

Will Mr. Smith Go To Washington?

Tom Smith, who may be the next senator from Pennsylvania, addressed and impressed the crowd at the breakfast meeting of the Republican Jewish Coalition of Pennsylvania and Southern New Jersey this morning, June 25, at the Crowne Plaza on City Avenue.

Smith, an experienced businessman but a political neophyte, was the against-party-wishes winner of April’s Republican Primary to take on unpopular incumbent Bob Casey Jr.

Smith’s connection with the gathering was made when he told his life’s story and what motivated him to run.

Smith grew up on a farm in Armstrong County which is still his home today. The Elderton High School Class of ’65 graduate had to forego college to take care of it for his terminally ill father. After he married his high school sweetheart, Saundy, who had gone on to college to become a teacher, he worked the farm in the day and ran heavy machinery in a coal mine in the evenings. 

He worked this way for 11 years noting he was a member in good standing with United Mine Workers of America for a bit of that time and that he was going to enjoy their reaction when he started collecting a partial pension from them.

He went into the coal business for himself in the early ’80s. He described the difficulties he had in getting a loan and how he had to mortgage his home to get the capital to rent heavy equipment, which was by the month. 

He succeeded and expanded and reached the point where his companies employed 130 people and annually took more than a million tons of coal from the ground.

He sold the companies in 2010.

He and Saundy have seven children, six of whom are daughters, one of whom is in the Army Reserve.

And the children are why he is running.

Smith said that the Democrat-controlled Senate with the full compliance of Casey Jr. has failed to pass a budget for three years.

“Can you imagine a family going for 1,000 days without a budget?” he said.

He said that the present spending projections will soon have America’s deficit beyond its gross domestic product. 

“I can’t look young people in the eye knowing what my generation was responsible for,” he said.

Smith said his business experience makes him well aware of why things are not working.

“I have seen first hand what government regulation can do to an industry,” he said.

He noted that while his background is coal he has no objections to alternative energy, providing use of this energy does not impoverish the nation’s citizens.

Smith took questions from the audience and answered all directly.  He said the United States has an unbreakable bond with Israel and that Jerusalem is the capital of Israel. He spoke of the dangers of a nuclear-armed Iran and while he would not take military force “off the table,” it would be the “court of last resort”.

He said he would work closely with Daniel Pipes of Middle East Forum, who was in attendance, to develop foreign policy.

“He’s going to become one of my best friends,” he said.

Smith was harshly critical of Obamacare and said he plans to tie Casey’s support to it every chance he gets even if it should be overturned by the Supreme Court.

He noted that he became well aware of the reasons for the expense of health care when providing it for his employees namely that it could only be purchased from a limited number of companies — four in his case; that he could not shop for it across state lines; and that he could not tailor polices to the needs and desires of his workers such as by leaving off coverage for acupuncture.

He also said tort reform was desperately needed.

Smith said he was optimistic about the race noting that he was down just seven points against a known incumbent and that incumbent has not managed to get above a 50 percent approval rating.

He said the state Republican organization is strongly backing him despite his primary victory over the party choice.

Smith was introduced by Bill Wanger who also noted that Joe Rooney, candidate for the 14th Congressional District; Robert Mansfield, candidate for the 2nd Congressional District; and Charles Gehret, candidate for State Senate District 17 were in attendance. 

Man Accused Of Stealing Riding Mower From A Church

By Pattie Price

Vincent Cortlessa, 48, of Oxford was held for a July 19 arraignment in Delaware County Common Pleas Court after a hearing, Thursday, before Magisterial District Judge Lee Hunter. on the charges of burglary, criminal trespass and criminal mischief. The charges stem from an incident 11:58 a.m., March 23, at the Liberty Baptist Church, 1519 N. Middletown Road, Edgmont, Pa.

According to the affidavit, Trooper Brian Maturo responded to the Middletown Road residence for a report of a burglary and the victim was following a blue Toyota Corolla south on Route 352. Sgt. Robert Reilly saw the vehicle in front of 14 N. Pennell Road and took Cortlessa into custody.

Cortlessa said he stopped at the church and saw a riding mower sitting next to a shed. He said he banged on the shed door to see if the mower needed to be fixed.

The complaintant said he was working in the rear of the property when he heard loud banging. He saw a pickup truck with ramps sticking out of the back and a man jumped in the truck and took off. The man got into his van, followed Cortlessa, obtained the license plate and called police. He followed Cortlessa to Route 452 where he was apprehended by police.

Cortlessa said there were no stolen items in his truck and gave police permission to search it. He admitted he backed up his truck when he saw a John Deer mower with a flat tire. He also admitted he broke one of the locks off the shed.

Seized from Cortlessa’s truck were bolt cutters, a pry bar, and a wooden ramp.

Bail was reduced from $50,000 to 10 percent of $25,000.  Cortelessa was returned to the George W. Hill Correctional Facility.

Pennsylvania HRC CAIR Connection

Pennsylvania HRC CAIR Connection

 

By Hillel Zaremba

Tasked with administering and enforcing the state’s anti-discrimination laws, the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission (PHRC) has become entangled in aiding an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood in its goal of stigmatizing and silencing any criticism of Islam or Muslims, including those engaged in terrorism.

The law that created the PHRC empowers it to:

Track incidents of bias that may cause community tension and to educate the general public, law enforcement, educators, and government officials in order to prevent discrimination and foster equal opportunity.

Occurrences labeled “bias incidents” are logged into a monthly “bias report” that is forwarded to the Pennsylvania State Police, who decide whether to investigate items appearing there. Thus, the PHRC generates a government-sanctioned report card on the level and types of intergroup tensions and possible hate crimes within the commonwealth. In the words of one PHRC official:

We use the bias report to inform the Legislature about trends and for our community education purposes.

In a better world, this course of action might be considered admirable. But in Harrisburg a system has evolved by whichCAIR-PA,[1] the local affiliate of the Council on American-Islamic Relations — an organization declared an unindicted co-conspirator in America’s most significant terror financing trial — can manipulate data and push the pernicious myth that the U.S. is filled with hateful, anti-Muslim citizens.

How does it accomplish this? The PHRC convenes a working group, the Inter-Agency Task Force on Civil Tension, whose purpose is “to prevent and/or respond to bias-related incidents and the escalation of intergroup tensions” in Pennsylvania. It includes representatives from the FBI, state police, the state attorney general’s office, and numerous public and private advocacy organizations throughout Pennsylvania. One of these is CAIR-PA.

Beginning in 2004 — and increasing in tempo from 2006 to the present — CAIR-PA has fed the PHRC items that it claims demonstrate bias against Muslims. These items then end up in the PHRC’s bias reports with no apparent reflection on whether they truly constitute bias incidents, actually took place, or ought to appear in a report intended to focus on Pennsylvania.

CAIR-PA registered as a non-profit corporation in Pennsylvania in 2005 and was recognized as a tax-deductible 501(c)(3) entity in 2006. Annual reports from the PHRC record an uptick in bias incidents against Muslims coinciding with those dates and with CAIR-PA’s growing relationship with the state agency. After a post-9/11 high in 2001-2002, such alleged incidents declined to an average of eight per year through 2005-2006, then increased again to the present, more than doubling to an average of 19 per year.

The problematic relationship between the two groups has come to light thanks to the efforts of State Representative Curt Schroder, who submitted a right-to-know request to the PHRC for correspondence between it and CAIR-PA at the behest of Islamist Watch (IW), a project of the Middle East Forum. The emails reveal a corrupting, overly friendly relationship between CAIR-PA and the PHRC, resulting in the government agency manipulating data on behalf of the Islamist group.

Examples of the unbecoming nature of this association abound:

  • In the fall of 2008, a DVD documentary about violent Islamism, Obsession, was distributed in newspapers across the country. CAIR’s national office referred to it in a complaint to the Federal Election Commission as “a blatant piece of anti-Muslim propaganda.” CAIR-PA’s Harrisburg representative Samia Malik alerted the PHRC’s Ann Van Dyke about the film; Van Dyke referred to it as bias incident (BI) #24115 on September 15. Shortly thereafter, a PHRC investigator assigned to evaluate the film wrote: “The information … in the DVD does not disparage Muslims as a group, and no racially or religiously offensive or derogatory language was used in the video.” Despite its own findings, the incident remained logged in the PHRC’s September 2008 bias report as a bias incident.
  • In August 2010, Tom Trento, a Florida-based activist, spoke at the Philadelphia Free Library about Islamism. CAIR-PA lodged a complaint with the PHRC about the lecture, alleging that “Trento … spoke in a biased manner against the broader Muslim community in Philadelphia.” The speech was then tagged as BI #34340. When Van Dyke notified PHRC staff, she attached an article about the presentation from the Philadelphia Bulletin, which quoted Trento as saying: “The issue isn’t Muslims, it’s where you stand on Sharia law.” The Bulletin article continued: “While quick to remind the audience his desire was not to bash Muslims … it was his intent to confront the ideology of Islam.” As no one from the PHRC had attended the speech, the agency apparently chose to label it a bias incident based solely on CAIR-PA’s version of what was said.
  • In March 2011, CAIR-PA held its annual fundraising dinner at a country club owned by Springfield Township in Delaware County, Pennsylvania. The story was picked up by a reporter for Examiner.com who sharply criticized the township’s hosting the group. CAIR-PA in turn threatened Examiner.com with a lawsuit. When the PHRC’s Van Dyke wrote CAIR-PA’s Executive Director Moein Khawaja urging him to file a report about the incident, Khawaja balked because he did not “want a lot of bias incidents against Muslims to be against CAIR.” Van Dyke persisted and suggested masking CAIR-PA’s involvement. Khawaja agreed with the solution, and BI #34387 against an unnamed “Muslim group” was logged for March 2011. By removing CAIR-PA’s identity from the equation, the PHRC transformed a warning about a municipality’s relationship with a suspect organization into a generic incident of anti-Muslim bias. (In a similar example from later that month, CAIR-PA claimed it had received a solicitation from an unnamed group to participate in acts of terrorism; the letter was inexplicably given a bias incident number, 34395, but again the bias report only mentioned an unnamed “Muslim group.”)

CAIR continually claims it is a civil liberties organization watching out for Muslim Americans, which helps explain its presence on the Inter-Agency Task Force. The PHRC is aware of CAIR’s troubling background but chooses to look the other way.

In June 2011, Islamist Watch supplied the agency with two sourced documents: one demonstrating governmental shunning of CAIR; the other illustrating CAIR’s past questionable behavior in word and deed. IW pressed the agency to reassess the relationship. Its reaction? “[T]he PHRC does not anticipate any further response to you at this time.” There is also clear evidence that the PHRC was aware of questions about CAIR before being contacted by IW.

It bears repeating that the PHRC has been charged with keeping accurate records of incidents with the potential to cause harm to the larger community. When such an agency becomes so closely involved with an advocacy group that it fudges or obfuscates data, real-world repercussions can ensue.

The most significant fallout from this dereliction of duty is the perpetuation of the notion that there is widespread “Islamophobia,” which must then be combated through educational and legislative remedies as well as through changes in law enforcement behaviors. The problem extends beyond Pennsylvania, as a group with an agenda like CAIR and its allies can use this faulty data to declare that FBI and other statistics only reveal the tip of the anti-Muslim iceberg.

For example, in March 2011 testimony[2] was offered before the U.S. Senate by Richard Cohen, president of theSouthern Poverty Law Center, who claimed that FBI “numbers vastly understate the problem” of hate crimes against Muslims. Cohen blamed “limitations in the collection of data” and went on to testify that his group “compiled news reports” of anti-Muslim bias that prove an increase in this phenomenon (as if newspaper reports are unassailable truth). According to the PHRC’s Doreen Winey[3] (director of education and community services and chairperson of the Inter-Agency Task Force), the agency also relies on news reports for collecting its data, which can result in travesties like the following.

An apparent mugging in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, was initially reported in an area newspaper as a possible hate crime because the victim was thought to be of “Middle Eastern descent.” But in a subsequent communication to the PHRC from local police, the event was revealed to have been a drug deal gone sour. Notwithstanding this important correction, BI #24596 remains on the books as an example of “Islamophobia” for March 2010.

There are undoubtedly occurrences of real prejudice within the state, but most of the incidents provided by CAIR-PA do not pass any rational smell test. For example:

  • In April 2006, CAIR-PA alerted the PHRC to an online cartoon published by an evangelical group in California which, in essence, claims that Muslims follow a false prophet. There was no noticeable Pennsylvania connection for BI #23290, but apparently in the PHRC’s eyes Christian evangelizing causes community tension. Muslim proselytizing does not, if its absence in PHRC’s records is any evidence.
  • For organizing “Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week” events on college campuses in October 2007, theDavid Horowitz Freedom Center was assigned BI #23738. Its “Stop the Jihad on Campus” educational events in 2008 earned it BI #2191, #24129, and #34122 (for three different campuses). While multiple anti-Israel demonstrations which might have discomfited Jewish students took place on many Pennsylvania campuses in those years, none were ever assigned a bias incident number.
  • In late 2009, CAIR-PA filed a complaint with the PHRC against Mason Crest Publishers and the Philadelphia-based Foreign Policy Research Institute for their World of Islam book series. CAIR-PAclaimed the series is “rife with false, anti-Muslim allegations, making this clear propaganda masquerading as a textbook” and the PHRC tagged it as BI #34258. There is no indication in the emails that PHRC staff examined the books themselves, a series praised by the School Library Journal as “illustrat[ing] the diversity of Islamic faith in a clear and unbiased manner.”
  • BI #24901 was assigned to the 2011 congressional hearings in Washington, D.C. about domestic terrorism, chaired by Congressman Peter King. Although the hearings had no Pennsylvania focus, the PHRC, relying on media reports that smeared the testimony as McCarthyism redux, obliged its Islamist partner — which had come under scrutiny during the examination — by identifying the hearings as a source of “intergroup tension.”
  • In 2011, the town council of Carnegie Borough discussed whether an empty church could be used as a mosque. The council voted 5-1 in favor of local Muslims’ request, but that was apparently not good enough for the PHRC. Van Dyke wrote: “I’m including this as a bias report [#2468] since it appears there were no concerns from the community when the building was used by Presbyterians but concerns/questions arose now that the building will be used by Muslims.”
  • Also in 2011, Islamist Watch itself was awarded BI #34427. Its crime? It had written to a Pittsburgh-area high school embroiled in an alleged anti-Muslim incident in an attempt to ascertain what had occurred. A section from IW’s mission statement was quoted in the bias report, but the wording explaining that IW is engaged in “identifying and promoting the work of moderate Muslims” was suspiciously omitted.

The picture that emerges from this survey of “bias incidents” is disturbing in the extreme. Not only do none of these items amount to expressions of bias per se, but it would seem that anybody who even raises a question about Islamists, let alone Islam, is smeared as a bigot. Ann Van Dyke, her colleagues at the PHRC, and their cronies within CAIR-PA have become the arbiters of free speech, the living embodiment of Orwell’s “thought police.”

No one is spared the PHRC’s righteous indignation. A Jewish temple disinvited a CAIR representative once it had learned more about the group’s background: BI #34383. Commentator Dennis Prager opined on the suitability of Congressman Keith Ellison swearing his oath of office on a Qur’an: BI #23466. An online article questioned the motives of Fethullah Gülen, a Turkish expatriate with a history of Islamist statements, who runs a network of schools across the U.S.: BI #24906.

In a September 2011 phone conversation with the PHRC, IW asked whether steps were taken to determine whether a reported incident actually occurred, before it is logged with a bias number; the answer was “no.” When asked what forensic credentials PHRC investigators possess, the answer was “none.” In addition, those accused of having engaged in a bias incident are not afforded any due process to refute the charge, nor is a bias incident, once entered, ever expunged from the record, even if it is determined to have no merit.

Thus BI #34357 remains on the books, despite being essentially debunked. The entire sordid story can be read here, but briefly, individuals associated with Philadelphia’s Masjid Al-Jamia (including CAIR-PA’s outreach director, Rugiatu Conteh) alleged that Islamophobes had repeatedly tried to block worshippers from entering the mosque in the summer of 2010. No police record of such behavior ever came to light, though two evangelists were arrested for preaching outside the building in July. They were eventually acquitted of all charges; Conteh, who claimed to have been at the mosque during one of the alleged protests, never showed up to tell her tale in court. Nonetheless, CAIR’s national office and the University of California-Berkeley’s Center for Race and Gender relied upon the unverified story in a 2011 report documenting “Islamophobia.”

CAIR-PA’s too-close relationship with the PHRC is further manifest in the matter of “hate mail.” It could perhaps be argued that if an organization receives a torrent of expletive-filled letters, it is the target of group hatred and that such behavior merits concern. But that does not appear to be the case with CAIR-PA, despite its and the PHRC’s attempt to frame its experiences in that fashion:

  • BI #23424 refers to a “hate mail” sent to CAIR-PA’s Samia Malik in October 2006, urging her not to be too upset about a reported Qur’an desecration. While the tone was sarcastic, there was no offensive language in the letter.
  • BI #23435 refers to a “hate mail” sent to Malik in August 2006, urging her to expose terrorists that CAIR and other Muslims allegedly know about. There was no offensive language in the letter.
  • Two “hate mails” from April and May 2006 seem to be “community alerts” sent to subscribers of a site called primitivepiety.net. The first alert threatened to beseech God to reveal unnamed Muslim “operatives” if recipients did not make free English-language Qur’ans available by a certain date. The second “hate mail” warned that a less “gentle” letter would soon arrive if Muslims did not comply with the writer’s wishes, which included adherence to Christian Science.
  • BI #23436 refers to an August 2006 “hate mail” in which the writer offered a rambling cross-analysis of the Qur’an and Bible, concluding that the latter is full of the word “love” while the former is full of “hell” and “slaughter.”
  • BI #34274 refers to a November 2009 “hate mail” to CAIR-PA, in which the writer stated: “If you do not like the West, you are free to leave” and “This nation was founded upon Christianity… and [not by] uncivilized and backward [people] like you.”

This is not to say that CAIR-PA or other Muslim groups have never received spiteful letters. The question is: do these occasional letters contribute to an atmosphere that threatens the safety and stability of the larger community? The answer, based on the incidents recorded by the PHRC, is painfully obvious.

At the same time, CAIR-PA is guilty of the unreflective prejudice it condemns, yet it remains a member of the Inter-Agency Task Force. Referring to a 2010 profanity-filled letter sent to the imam of the Muslim Association of Lehigh Valley (BI #24788), CAIR-PA’s Khawaja wrote: “If [the purported sender’s] name is actually Joe Martin, the offender is most likely white.” When discussing the World of Islam book series previously mentioned, CAIR described the publishing partner, the Foreign Policy Research Institute, as “a right-wing, pro-war think tank.” Referring to the Peter King congressional hearings, Khawaja tweeted: “If ur minority and havent figured that GOP is bastion of racism and bigotry, get ur head out of ur ass.” Apparently, malicious characterizations give offense only when the receiving end is an Islamist organization.

Unpleasant as it may be, the tone of CAIR-PA’s less-than-civil ruminations is not the fundamental issue. Freedom of expression is. CAIR should be permitted to malign white people or Republicans if it so wishes; it must not, however, be permitted a forum — and an influential relationship — to shut down others’ rights to free speech. By registering sporadic and generally innocuous private communications as bias incidents, by credulously accepting CAIR-PA’s allegations as truth, by labeling all who question the behaviors of Islamists or even Islam itself as bigots, the PHRC is guilty of inflating the number of anti-Muslim acts, fueling the “Islamophobia” industry, and threatening public discourse on controversial issues.

As long as the PHRC’s method of doing business, especially its reliance on CAIR-PA, is not reformed, the citizens of Pennsylvania will continue to suffer. Setting aside the waste of taxpayer dollars for an agency that uses the shoddiest research methods imaginable, the PHRC, in collusion with CAIR-PA, besmirches the commonwealth’s reputation by creating the impression that it suffers from rampant anti-Muslim bias. This, in turn, can have important legislative and law enforcement repercussions affecting the quality of life within Pennsylvania. Simultaneously, the PHRC helps spread the dubious meme of nationwide “Islamophobia,” providing it with the patina of governmental endorsement.

As thought and criticism come under attack by these fatally flawed gatekeepers, legislators may be encouraged to view perfectly legitimate critiques as “hate crimes” and enact laws infringing on public expression. Police may err on the side of caution, shutting down dissenting voices, because they perceive that free speech laws do not apply equally in cases involving Islamists. Such a chilled atmosphere may also hinder law enforcement from conducting necessary investigations, for fear of giving offense.

The PHRC and CAIR-PA are fostering an environment of thought control, where no criticism of Islamists or troubling aspects of Islam is tolerated. This is a path that all Pennsylvanians should resist, including those Muslim Americans who oppose CAIR’s agenda of false victimization and whose voices need to be heard the most.


[1] The branch of the Council on American-Islamic Relations examined here calls itself variously CAIR-PA and CAIR-Philadelphia. For purposes of this report, we use only CAIR-PA.

[2] The PHRC absurdly tagged the testimony as BI #24934, even though Cohen’s statement has practically nothing to do with Pennsylvania and is, in fact, against anti-Muslim bias. Cohen does mention an unnamed Pennsylvania educator whose “history program had come under attack by several parents because they believed the text was ‘advocating a positive “indoctrination” of Islam.’” The PHRC’s Van Dyke corresponded with Khawaja about this and the latter admitted he “can’t pinpoint whether or not we have heard from that PA history teacher, but that is a VERY common occurrence w/ parents disparaging of any curriculum that is not critical of Islam or Muslims.” (Moein Khawaja, email to Doreen Winey, April 19, 2011.) Thus, despite no outside corroboration — even from CAIR — the item was logged as a bias incident.

[3] Doreen Winey, telephone interview with author, September 21, 2011.

Pennsylvania HRC’s CAIR Connection