Sunday, February 11, 2007

Storm Track Intimidation: Creeping Shariah Law on the Road to Zanzibar

What seems to be many as odd behavior by Muslims is really a systematic approach by Islamists to institute Shariah law in, up to now, moderate Muslim countries. Where the Islamists don’t have enough numbers to force Shariah law upon a population like the recent insurgency in Somalia (that was ultimately defeated by Ethiopia) they try to wear down the population with creeping Shariah law.

Their current target is Zanzibar.

A police ban on women drivers wearing veils is now in effect across the Indian Ocean islands of Zanzibar, drawing some protests from the overwhelmingly Muslim population. Zanzibar police commander Ramadhan Khatib said the measure was intended to curb a rise in traffic accidents which reached a record 680 – with 40 deaths and 100 injuries – last year. "We have the responsibility of ensuring we decrease the accidents, and we think veil-wearers have to be included in this exercise as well," he said.

Sounds like a reasonable law. But Islamists are not reasonable.

Read the rest at The Gathering Storm.

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1 comment:

Cubed © said...

It's the "Great Sneak in Under the Tentflap" caper, the "Great Backdoor Technique."

And riding right on the coattails of their insistence that all they have the "right" to do all this is OUR lack of understanding (thanks to the postmodernist schools) of just what constitutes a "right," and our utter failure to separate political Islam from religious Islam.

We think, thanks to our lack of understanding, that in order to respect the Muslims' freedom to believe, that we must also respect their infiltration of our institutions.

Not true; where a religion, for example, believes that it's just fine and dandy to practice human sacrifice, we wouldn't tolerate that action for a minute. People are free to believe whatever they want, but they are not free to act or behave in a manner which violates the rights of other people.

If our schools were teaching our kids what a "right" is, and the thinking skills necessary to separate the politics of Islam from the religion of Islam, we wouldn't be in nearly the mess we're in now.

I'm trying to spread around the address of a sight that you all may already know about, but which I only ran across a couple of weeks ago; it might very well be useful in the latter question (the separation of political Islam from religious Islam); it's the Center for the Study of Political Islam.

They have some very clear, to-the-point "core" books useful in formulating discussions about the difference, and probably for teachers who might want to clarify issues with their students.