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Horowitz and Spencer’s Islamophobia
The authors’ latest piece reveals their true feelings about Islam.

By Matt Duss


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Editor’s Note: David Horowitz’s reply to this letter can be found here. Robert Spencer’s reply is here.

To the editors:

In a recent article for National Review Online, David Horowitz and Robert Spencer criticized the Center for American Progress’s report “Fear, Inc.: The Roots of the Islamophobia Network in America.” Following a familiar formula, the authors play the victim, accusing CAP of peddling “conspiracy theories” about anti-Muslim activists like themselves.

Even a cursory glance at our report, however, shows we have done no such thing. Quite the contrary, the dissemination of hateful anti-Muslim ideas by Horowitz, Spencer, and others is done right out in the open. CAP’s contribution was to document these efforts, to draw together the various strands in order to properly view them as part of a coherent whole — an organized campaign to spread misinformation about the religious faith of millions of Americans.

The authors first take issue with our use of the term “Islamophobia,” claiming “the purpose of the suffix — phobia — is to identify any concern about troubling Islamic institutions and actions as irrational, or worse as a dangerous bigotry that should itself be feared.” This is false. As my co-authors and I note in our report, we don’t use the term “Islamophobia” lightly. We define it as an exaggerated fear, hatred, and hostility toward Islam and Muslims that is perpetuated by negative stereotypes resulting in bias, discrimination, and the marginalization and exclusion of Muslims from America’s social, political, and civic life.

We think that any fair-minded reader of Horowitz and Spencer’s work, which our report extensively documents, would conclude that it qualifies.

Engaging in exactly the sort of careless slander that our report examines, the authors then deride similar reports from what they refer to as “[Muslim] Brotherhood fronts like CAIR [the Council on American-Islamic Relations], and jihadist apologists like the Southern Poverty Law Center.” Interestingly, they spare the Anti-Defamation League, which released a backgrounder earlier this year declaring that Spencer’s group, Stop Islamization of America, “promotes a conspiratorial anti-Muslim agenda under the guise of fighting radical Islam.”

Spencer’s group, the Anti-Defamation League wrote, “seeks to rouse public fears by consistently vilifying the Islamic faith and asserting the existence of an Islamic conspiracy to destroy ‘American’ values.” Should the Anti-Defamation League also be lumped with the “jihadist apologists”?

Rather than addressing such charges, however, the authors spend the majority of their response listing reasons why Islamic extremist terrorism represents a genuine threat to American security. But they are rebutting an argument we have not made. As evidenced by the considerable amount of work CAP has produced on the subject, we take the issue of national security extremely seriously — far more seriously than Horowitz and Spencer’s selective, inflammatory, and unscholarly rendering of the Islamic peril suggests that they themselves do.

It is enormously revealing that Horowitz and Spencer do not address the actual argument made in “Fear, Inc.,” which is that they, along with a small cadre of self-appointed experts and activists, promote the idea that religiously inspired terrorism represents true Islam. (“Traditional Islam itself is not moderate or peaceful,” wrote Spencer in 2006. “It is the only major world religion with a developed doctrine and tradition of warfare against unbelievers.”) They also promote the idea that Sharia law is incompatible with a modern society (“There is no form of Sharia that does not contain . . . [the] death penalty for apostasy,” wrote Spencer, obviously ignorant of the manner in which Islam is practiced by millions of Sharia-adherent Muslims in the United States).

The unmistakable implication of these claims is that all observant Muslims should be viewed with suspicion simply by virtue of being observant Muslims. That’s obviously Islamophobic. (It also flies in the face of the evidence. Earlier this year, the largest study of Muslim Americans ever done, the Muslim American Public Opinion Survey, found that “involvement with the mosque, and increased religiosity increases civic engagement and support for American democratic values.”)

It is worth noting here the irony of Horowitz and Spencer’s accusing CAP of promulgating a conspiracy theory, because, as the Anti-Defamation League’s backgrounder also notes, a conspiracy is precisely what those authors themselves allege in regard to American Muslims’ supposed efforts to infiltrate the American legal system with Islamic Sharia law. (For an examination and rebuttal of those claims, see CAP’s previous issue brief, “Understanding Sharia Law.”)

And finally, a word about the venue in which Horowitz and Spencer’s piece was published, National Review. While we don’t share many of this magazine’s positions, we recognize it as an institution of American conservatism and a key player in the American political debate. Its imprimatur matters, which is why we’re concerned that that imprimatur should be granted to characters like Horowitz and Spencer.

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COMMENTS   74

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   10/19/11 06:41

Concerning the death peanlty for apostasy under Sharia, the authors state "obviously [Spencer is] ignorant of the manner in which Islam is practiced by millions of Sharia-adherent Muslims in the United States." Obviously, the authors are ignorant that U.S. is not an Islamic state and hopefully never will be. Additionally, maybe Robert Welch was overboard, but the fact was there were communists at the highest levels of U.S. government. That is also true today and, with Obama in the WH, I am sure there are some jihadis there as well.

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   10/20/11 12:59

Dave-who do you suspect are jihadis in the White House? Please tell. Do you suspect the President is a jihadist or has jihadist sympathies?
Please explain your suspicions.
President Obama has used more Predator Drone strikes in Af-Pak in 3 years than Bush did in 8. President Obama ordered the killing of Bin Laden and Anwar Al-Awlaki. There are routinely drone strikes in Yemen killing Al-Qaida in the Arabian Pennisula members. How can you substantiate your claims of jihadis in the White House?

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   10/19/11 06:40

Knowing that the vast majority of Muslims simply want to live in peace, I don't know why anyone would be Islamaphobic. It isn't like their holy book calls for killing the infidels and extols the glories of inheriting eternal life based on dying in war against those unbelievers. It isn't like there are educated men who attack and murder thousands of people in our country in the name of that religion. But wait. There is a holy book that says commands killing and there have been educated men who have killed innocent men, women and children in the name of that religion. And more are on the way. From the current trial, "In late 2009, in fulfillment of a religious obligation, I decided to participate in jihad against the United States. The Koran obliges every able Muslim to participate in jihad and fight in the way of Allah, those who fight you, and kill them wherever you find them.
- Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, October 12, 2011

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   10/19/11 07:50

Duss, what are you trying to sell us? Your assertion that the Islam practiced in the U.S. is "compliant with Sharia law" is complete ignorance - or intentional misdirection. Fortunately, we don't have Sharia law penal codes here - yet. God and Americans willing, we never will.

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occupant 9
   10/19/11 08:09

True Islam is what Mo left the world and 1400 years of it is inadmissible to Duss. What's so wrong with knowing Islam's agenda and being opposed to the ideology of war that it espouses?

Duss's ignorance is suspicious and disingenuous. He has no truth to his accusations against Spencer and Horowitz but wishes them to shut up forever, much like the jihadists who oppose any free thinking person with threats of death.

Well, if Spencer and Horowitz have Islam all wrong, then so did Mo and his most ardent followers for the past 1400 years. It's as if the myth of peaceful Islam was "hijacked" by Mo himself since he abandoned peacefulness with the Verse of the Sword!

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   10/19/11 08:16

"As my co-authors and I note in our report, we don’t use the term “Islamophobia” lightly"

It's the title of your book! Of course it is used lightly, because there is no Islamophobia in this country. You breezily declare a crisis in the title and suddenly take umbrage at a much more articulate rebuttal of that premise.

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   10/19/11 10:52

jfpack:
Well, precisely. Far from engaging in the “careless slander,” of which he inexpertly accuse Horowitz, Spencer, et al, Mr. Duss engages in purposeful slander, which contention, if tautologically expressed, is at least on point.

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   10/19/11 08:27

"It’s unfortunate that, rather than do the same in response to Welch’s heirs, today’s National Review gives them a platform."

right, they should give YOU a platform but not anyone that disagrees with you...that's what i have come to know as democracy islam style.

and what did dr jasser, a true american who happens to be muslim, think of your little study that also slams him?

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kamel from uk
   10/19/11 08:37

Matt you stink. Get lost. Now.
There's no such thing as islamophobia, there is islam and it's evil. It's more a cult than a religion, and it's an ideology of killers, hijackers, child and wife molesters and terrorists. Of course, I could put it a little more mildly, but why should I?

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   10/19/11 09:21

Mr Duss' analysis is a head-in-the-sand denial of a problem which has confronted Western civilization since Islamic expansionism began in the mid-7th (yes, that's the "seventh") century. There is no shame, and every value, in naming and confronting the enemies of one's civilization. The alternative is dhimmitude.

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   10/19/11 10:25

I'm with Dr. Robert on this one. 1) Islam is not a religion, it is a totalitarian political ideology whose goal is world conquest
2) Sharia is incompatible with democracy as is any state religion
3) Muslims can lie to the infidel, so any observant Muslim cannot be trusted.

Call that what you want but those are the facts of life.

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Omar22
   10/19/11 10:34

" . . . an organized campaign to spread misinformation about the religious faith of millions of Americans."

If you're going to make such accusations don't you at least have an obligation to identify the alleged slanders and demonstrate their untruth?

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   10/19/11 10:38

And how are things in Riyadh?

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   10/19/11 10:55

NRO has afforded far too much space to this leftist apologist for terror. The Center for American Progress is hard-left; this particular author comes across as a useful idiot for militant Islam.

Look, NRO: you aren't Fox; you don't need the mantra “fair and balanced.”

I would not censor comments made by the author. Neither, however, would I afford him the privilege of being featured. That's going too far.

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TheDawg
   10/19/11 13:34

I completely agree with John. I was getting angry as I read the featured article, and then was stunned when I got to the bottom and saw that the author was from the Center for American Progress. Why NRO would give a prominent platform to an organization like that is beyond me. Not to mention that the author's rants against American "Islamophobia" are the featured point of view on the vast majority of news outlets; why does NRO feel compelled to do the same?

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sgtgaffers
   10/20/11 16:59

I think their intention behind publishing this is to beef up the comments board. If everybody agreed with the article, the board would only consist of a few outsiders making ridiculous statements and everybody else pouncing on them. As you can see, this is not by a NR staff member, instead it is sent to them by a member of a progressive group.

Consider this letter to be bait or chum. Its a sloppy mess that gives conservatives the opportunity to tear it apart.

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   10/20/11 15:01

No, you're wrong, for important reasons.

Reason #1: If people can't speak their minds, how will we know what dangerous ideas they hold?

Reason #2: Freedom of speech is a good thing, because it makes it easier to spot the idiots.

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Just a Realist
   10/19/11 11:13

Jack in Silver Spring is spot-on.

Horowitz and Spencer do not go far enough.

Islam is not solely a religion; it is also an authoritarian, aggressive, expansionist, repressive political ideology which would destroy western civilisation by rolling the clock back, worldwide, by 14 centuries.

As such, Islam should be treated as the west once treated communism: Deny foreign aherents entry, monitor native adherents, and work actively for the collapse of a vicious ideology.

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   10/19/11 11:47

(“There is no form of Sharia that does not contain . . . [the] death penalty for apostasy,” wrote Spencer, obviously ignorant of the manner in which Islam is practiced by millions of Sharia-adherent Muslims in the United States)"

Ok, CAP- you do realize you are not refuting anything here, right? To refute this you would have to point out where Sharia law does NOT mandate death for apostasy. I'm not saying it always does as I haven't read the Quran or Hadith, but that's what needs to be in this piece if you're going to take down Spencer and Horowitz.

The extent to which millions of Muslims in this country are "sharia compliant" and that they do not endorse death for leaving the faith is due to they're IGNORING Islamic law. And that is a GREAT thing as most Christians and Jews in this country... ah....selectively pick and choose what they like about their religion and disregard the fire and brimstone Old Testament/Torah stuff.

Essentially, we need Muslim Episcopalians- people whose main concern is making enough money to support their families, observing the really important religious days [2-4 per year] and going to services every now and then to compare clothes with their fellow congregants.

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   10/19/11 22:08

I also enjoyed Duss's seeming affirmation at the beginning of the letter, pertaining to the clarification of "Islamophobia." Going into great depth to explain how he/they meant "Islamophobia" in their report, and at the same time, entirely supporting Spencer and Horowitz's assertions. Surely if Duss believes the term to aptly describe "...an exaggerated fear, hatred, and hostility toward Islam and Muslims that is perpetuated by negative stereotypes resulting in bias, discrimination, and the marginalization and exclusion of Muslims from America’s social, political, and civic life." he would also argue that this fear is baseless. I can only assume Duss felt that Horowitz and Spencer's generalization of the term was far to broad to express it's severity...

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