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Sikh Temple Shooting Reveals the Devastating Results of Hate Mongering
The concept of cause and effect plays out every day in every human being’s life, and some actions are meant to produce a desired effect over a long period of time. For the past eleven years, conservatives have demonized the Muslim religion (cause) for the sole purpose of striking fear and loathing in the population (effect) regardless there is any real threat or danger from Americans who adhere to Islam. Using fear-mongering to achieve an effect is a favorite tactic of Republicans, and as is usually the case, fear turns into anger and hate that garners support for Republican policies and agendas. The opposition to an Islamic community center near Ground Zero was a result of conservative propaganda that had no basis in fact, but it did serve the Republican’s purpose of stirring up hate and suspicion towards Muslims. The news yesterday that 7 people were killed at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin was another reminder that perpetual fear and hate-mongering inspires devastating results when the wrong person reaches their breaking point, and it was just a matter of time before there was an act of violence in Wisconsin.
Wisconsin is home to an ongoing movement to block construction of a mosque in Brookfield, because of community fears of Sharia Law being implemented and spreading throughout the region. In fact, across America there is case after case of Republicans warning that Sharia, or Islamic law, poses a threat to the United States as grave as or graver than terrorism. In the case of the Brookfield mosque, on the same day Islamic leaders invited the public to attend an open house and ask questions about Islam, an anti-Islam rally sponsored by a Christian radio station, VCY America, was held at the Waukesha Expo Center “to find out if the message about what Islam really is getting out properly.” A local preacher said, “I hold freedom of religion very dear, but Islam is not just a religion; it is also a state government system, completely contrary to our system of government, our Constitution should not be subverted to sharia law.” The preacher’s remarks are not unique, and inform the level of ignorance about the Constitution that is rampant in that segment of the population that thrives on hate.
The threat of Sharia Law is non-existent in America, but coupled with conservative and fanatical evangelical’s persistent claims that this country was founded as, and remains, a Christian nation serves to fuel suspicion and opposition to Islam that is, whether Christians admit it or not, a legitimate religion. The notion of Sharia Law replacing the Constitution is about as valid as extremist Christian attempts to replace the Constitution with the Christian bible’s Ten Commandments as the law of the land, but persistent accusations that Muslims are terrorists plotting the overthrow of the government keeps the issue alive and growing.
It is too early to know if the shooter in Wisconsin mistook Sikhs for Muslims, or if he acted out of a twisted belief he was protecting America from an Islamic threat, but with the propaganda campaign and fear-mongering about the threat of Islam, it will not be surprising if he thought he was killing Muslims to stop Sharia Law. Although the anti-Islam movement began after 9/11, it gained traction when an African-American man ran for President, and since Barack Obama has been in office, there has been increasing vitriol targeting Muslim-Americans.
Yesterday this column cited a sharp increase in the number of conservative Republicans who are certain President Obama is a Muslim, and it is due in no small part to the escalation of lies from right-wing talking heads. Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Glenn Beck, and the Fox News crowd have made a concerted effort to impugn the President as not American, a foreigner, and a Muslim. The right-wing assault on Muslims is not unlike Adolf Hitler’s propaganda against the Jews in Nazi Germany that eventually convinced Germans to turn in their neighbors for imprisonment and slaughter. Fox News and their ilk have utilized the same tactics to impugn President Obama and Muslims, and add to that the ambiguous statements of evangelical Christian leaders questioning the “kind of Christianity” the President adheres to, and it is no wonder frightened racists develop an abnormal fear of Muslims. Presumptive Republican presidential candidate Willard Romney has made questioning the President’s understanding of what it means to be American a crucial aspect of his campaign, and the fallacious accusations that President Obama travelled to the Middle East to apologize and appease the Muslim world creates more suspicion, fear, and hatred of Muslims by associating them with the foreign President.
Americans should have been appalled at the opposition to an Islamic Center near Ground Zero from Republicans who used the terror attacks to invoke hatred toward Muslims, but with Fox News and Republican lawmakers lining up to show their outrage, it soon became a pariah to speak up for religious freedom. Republicans have, in fact, played the religious freedom card to great effect in their fight to restrict women’s access to contraception, but as has been noted several times, their version of religious liberty means the right to impose radical Christianity on the entire population. However, as the preacher above said, he holds religious freedom in the highest regard, as long as it is his religious freedom to exclude Islam that he claimed was not a religion at all, but a state government system that is contrary to the Constitution.
This country is in jeopardy of erupting into sectarian violence based on race and religion, and in fact, among ultra-right wing fringe groups there is persistent talk of a coming race war. In the coming days Americans will learn what, if any, motivation caused a thirty-something white male to drive to a Sikh temple and begin shooting innocent Americans congregating to worship in the manner they see fit. One thing is clear, the man did not drive to the local Baptist or Assembly of God church and open fire on white congregants, and there were no anti-Catholic rallies in Wisconsin to incite protests against Vatican law leaving only one plausible conclusion; something drove a white man to gun down dark-skinned people with long beards and head coverings, and one can imagine that he confused peaceful Sikhs with equally peaceful Muslims he thought were plotting to replace the Constitution with Sharia Law and conquer America. If he had been paying attention, he would know America has already been conquered by right-wing hate and their propaganda machine at Fox News and the Republican National Committee.
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dusty
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 10:17 am
hey, its another foxnews viewer. they love the white supremacist neo nazi…. they play games with these fools, and then deny that they are the voice of these types…… rMONEY keeps on the race game too, when you call the prez, a forigner or he isnt like us. the scared white guy like this will do what he just did….
foxnews, drudge, rightwing radio, lumpy, you have this blood on your hands.
dusty
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 10:19 am
p.s.
if any of you noticed, while this happened, drudge massive headline was, ‘serena, [after shw won the gold in tennis] does the ‘crip’ walk….. linked to a rightwing neo nazi site.
more to come……
Dan Lewis
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 10:55 am
I agree with Dusty on this matter.
KatzKids
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 10:19 am
News is coming out now that the shooter is an Army Vet who was discharged from the Army after being downgraded from Sergent to specialist. He’s also a White Supremacist/Skinhead. No surprise there. I’ve been appalled by some of the comments on blogs saying the guy should have learned the difference between Muslims & Sikhs as if it would have been fine if it was a Muslim Temple. Hatred is contagious & is spreading with the ferocity of a wild fire across our country. It’s escalating fast.
Great post Rmuse – thanks.
gkkk04
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 12:16 pm
No one in the Sikh community believes “it would have been fine if it was a Muslim temple”. But yes, we DO want people to learn there are big differences between Sikhism and Islam, and to learn this fact: Nearly every person who wears a turban in America is Sikh. and NOT a terrorist. Please inform yourselves and your networks: Who Are Sikhs? Thank you.
Rmuse
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 1:18 pm
gkkk04 – KatzKids wasn’t saying Sikhs would have thought an attack on Muslims was acceptable. The Sikhs I know abhor violence. The problem is right-wing haters think if Muslims were slain it would be great. There is an epidemic of hate in this country and it deeply saddens decent human beings. Frankly, it is irrelevant who is targeted by hate…hate is hate and we are all in jeopardy unless something changes.
harris stein
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 2:19 pm
The only thing today preventing pogrom style riots against anyone who seems different from white Christian America is, sad to say, a professional paramilitary police force.
It’s obvious that this is what the hate groups want. Their goal is to create a climate of intense fear that normal people will get swept up in their hate.
The fact that neither President Obama or Romney said anything about the hate groups is very troubling. This shows that while they might deplore this kind of violence, they do not say anything regarding the totalitarian concept of racsist violence and its use as a tool of totalitarian regimes.
A Walkaway
Aug. 7th, 2012 at 11:37 am
Part of the problem is the reaction from the conservatives/Religious Right whenever the term “Christian Terrorism” or “right wing terrorism” is mentioned. They don’t want “Christian” or “Conservative” ever connected with terrorism, even though it’s a huge problem and most terrorist groups around the world are actually quite conservative in nature.
That may be why President Obama doesn’t want to talk about it that much… because too many people in this country believe and assert (and I sometimes think he’s infected with this false thought): “But it’s a CHURCH, it can’t be THAT BAD!!!”
As the rest of us have attested, YES THEY CAN!!!
Since Romney is a member of such a church, he’s not going to admit his own are a real problem and threat.
Sugapea
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 3:22 pm
Thanks, Rmuse.
I went to the top Pub websites and could not find one single mention of this WI Shooter.
What’s up with that?
1voice1vote
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 3:41 pm
This is who hate gunned down yesterday:
“Deep within the self is the Light of God. It radiates throughout the expanse of His creation. Through the Guru’s teachings, the darkness of spiritual ignorance is dispelled. The heart lotus blossoms forth and eternal peace is obtained, as one’s light merges into the Supreme Light.” – Sikh Guru
And burned down: “Missouri mosque destroyed in suspicious fire”
“For the second time in about a month, a mosque in Joplin, Missouri caught fire on Monday, but this time it was burned to the ground.”…
I weep for my country. We must stand against the lies of the Republican hate machine: It’s. killing. us.
peace
Sharp Little Pencil
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 3:52 pm
Just to let you know, I’m a proud Wisconsinite living in Madison, and I DEPLORE any attempt at blocking mosque construction, I DEPLORE the “concealed carry” gun laws in this state (which do not currently require ANY safety education and were rammed through by Gov. Walker’s pals, the NRA). I DO support hunting rifles when used for that purpose. There is no reason for anyone in the US, except the National Guard (the “militias” the Founders were talking about) to carry high-powered weapons of any kind. Wisconsin is a leader is social justice, and the hatred occurring in this action and in some others is strictly NOT in keeping with our ethical standards.
Rmuse
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 4:40 pm
I hope I speak for all of us that it is not Wisconsinites who are the problem. It is pure evil and hatred in a particular segment of the population. They want to hate someone or something, and if it wasn’t Muslims and African Americans, it would be Buddhists, or liberals, or artists; anyone not like them. America is experiencing one of its darkest hours and we’re one incident away from an all-out war against anything not white, Christian, and neo-conservative.
Banned Atheist
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 4:47 pm
Ayup. And now Pat Robertson is pointing the hate at atheists and blaming atheists for the Sikh temple shooting, despite the clear evidence that the alleged shooter was a white supremacist like himself.
Here’s the link (video):
bannedatheists.us/2012/08...
Rmuse
Aug. 6th, 2012 at 7:23 pm
Oh here we go; blame the atheists. Evangelicals blame gays, lack of prayer in schools, leftists, liberals, women, and minorities for every tragedy as they fight to put more guns in the hands of hate-mongers. No self-respecting Atheist, or Secular Humanist, would stoop to blaming an innocuous group for a tragedy. It is, like Pat Robertson, sickening.
A Walkaway
Aug. 7th, 2012 at 11:32 am
It’s pretty clear now that a racist bigot was responsible and that he was a member of, or supporter of hate groups.
The promotion of hate is the problem here. The promotion of the idea that any group is inherently superior to everyone else and deserves higher status. The denigration of minorities of all types.
We need to find more effective ways to counter that. Education is one thing that needs to be increased… when people realize that what they believe just isn’t so, they’ll stop and start thinking more (and resisting the propaganda). Exposure to the Other is also needed, so that people realize that while someone else may “dress funny” or “think funny”, or even “act funny”, they’re still human beings and deserve respect.