Bureau report indicates Muslim group's claims wildly inflated
By Chuck Hustmyre
Two recently released reports highlight the difference between the
FBI's calculation of the number of religiously motivated hate crimes
and that of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.
In CAIR's annual report, "The Status of Muslim Civil Rights in the
United States – 2007," the subtitle of which, "Presumption of Guilt,"
foreshadows the report's main theme, the Muslim lobby group claims the
number of hate crimes committed against Muslims has risen each year
since 1996. CAIR began keeping track of civil rights violations and
hate crimes against Muslims that year because of what the report calls
the "anti-Muslim backlash that followed the 1995 attack on the Alfred
P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City."
According to that report, CAIR received 2,467 complaints of civil
rights violations in 2006 – 25 percent more than it received in 2005.
CAIR also said it received 167 allegations of anti-Muslim hate crimes,
up more than 9 percent from last year's 153 complaints.
The report goes on to say that in 2006, "Several key polls indicated
that the level of Islamophobia continues to rise today in American
society."
But CAIR's report stands in stark contrast to a report released last
month by the FBI. In that report, titled "Hate Crime Statistics, 2006,"
compiled from the input of more than 12,000 law enforcement agencies
across the country, FBI figures show that the number of incidents of
religious hate crime against Muslims plunged 68 percent since 2001.
According to the FBI report, the Justice Department defines hate crimes
as "criminal offenses that are motivated, in whole or in part, by the
offender's bias against race, religion, sexual orientation,
ethnicity/national origin, or disability and are committed against
persons, property, or society."
The FBI's methodology is also explained in its report.
CAIR's 42-page report, on the other hand, does not explain what the
organization considers a hate crime. Although CAIR's report contains a
"glossary of Islamic terms" – including Allah, Hajj, hijab, kufi and
Ramadan – it does not include a definition of "hate crime."
CAIR did not respond to WND's e-mail or telephone requests for
clarification of the organization's use of the term "hate crime" in its
annual report.
Even though the CAIR report does not define a hate crime, it does
provide a few examples of them, including this one: "September 20, 2006
– A copy of the Quran was found in a toilet at the library of Pace
University in New York."
The report goes on to say, "Initially, (the) Pace University
administration called the desecration 'vandalism,' but with the
collaborative efforts of CAIR-NY, the Association of Muslim American
Lawyers, the New York Police Department Hate Crimes Task Force ... and
the Muslim Students Association at Pace, university administrators now
recognize the incident as a hate crime."
According to published news reports, a 23-year-old former Pace student
was arrested last summer and charged with felony hate crimes. The
charges carry with them a possible sentence of up to four years in
prison.
Critics point to a double standard: Burning an American flag is
considered free speech, and the submersion of a Christian Crucifix in
urine has not only been called art, but funded by U.S. taxpayers – and
yet flushing a paperback copy of the Quran down a toilet is now a hate
crime.
Contradicting CAIR's claim that U.S. Muslims are increasingly the
target of hate-mongers, the annual FBI report on hate crime has for
several years consistently shown that Jews are far more likely to be
victims of religious hate crimes than Muslims. In 2006, according to
the report, 65 percent of the victims of religious hate crimes were
Jewish, while only 12 percent were Muslim.
Of the 6,832 incidents of religious hate crime committed between 2002
and 2006, some 4,627, or 68 percent, were committed against Jews, while
744, or 11 percent, were committed against Muslims.
According to FBI statistics going back to 2000, Jews are more than five
times more likely than Muslims to be the victims of hate crimes.
The CAIR report does not mention hate crimes committed against any
population group other than Muslims.
One factor that could account for some of the disparity in the number
of hate crimes committed against members of the two groups would be a
significant difference in the size of their populations. If, for
instance, there were five times as many Jews as Muslims in the United
States, a five-fold increase in the number of anti-Jewish hate crimes
might be expected.
Accurate population figures for religious groups are hard to come by,
especially since the U.S. Census Bureau is prohibited from asking
respondents about their religion. But according to several recent
estimates, including a 2007 survey, Jews in the United States of
America number approximately 6 million.
CAIR claims the U.S. Muslim population numbers at least 6 million.
However, in May, Investor's Business Daily took CAIR to task on that
figure based on a recently released and exhaustive study by the Pew
Research Center, called "Muslim Americans: Middle Class and mostly
Mainstream."
The Pew study, the methodology for which was also exhaustively
explained, estimated the adult Muslim population in the United States
to be 1.5 million, with a total Muslim population of 2.35 million, less
than half the number claimed by CAIR, which has attacked the validity
of the Pew study.
Just after the study was released, Investor's Business Daily called
CAIR's estimate of 6 million American Muslims a "wildly inflated guess"
based on "fuzzy math."
"Politicians in Washington are intimidated by the figure," the
newspaper said, "which CAIR uses as a cudgel to help advance its
Islamist agenda."
Politicians and business executives have for years caved in to pressure
from CAIR, the newspaper said, because they feared the repercussions
from the organization's millions of voters and consumers. But, the
article concluded, the bloated population figure was "the Wahhabi
lobby's big lie. CAIR couldn't deliver even 2 million voters if it
tried. ... There is no big Muslim lobby, just CAIR's big, hollow PR
machine."
Regardless of whose estimate is correct as to the number of Muslims in
the U.S. – CAIR's 6 million or Pew's 2.35 million – they are not
outnumbered five-to-one by Jews.
An additional finding of the Pew study was the revelation that 26
percent of American Muslims younger than 30 expressed support, under at
least some circumstances, for suicide bombings in defense of Islam.
CAIR denounced that Pew finding as well.
Original
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