
Muslim Groups Seek a Redefinition of Terrorism That Doesn’t Include Them
And the Anglican church supports them.
Muslim groups are demanding that the Australian government redefine terrorism so that it does not include acts motivated by religion.
That’s because the real threat to Australia isn’t terrorism, but the definition of terrorism.
How stupid are we?
All these years we’ve spent worrying about terrorist attacks, when we could have completely eliminated the threat by simply changing the definition!
Thank you, Muslim groups, for coming to our rescue.
The nation will be much safer once we all agree that terrorism has absolutely nothing to do with religion, especially the religion terrorists keep shouting about just before things explode.
The Elephant in the Room
Fifteen Muslim groups, led by the Australian Muslim Advocacy Network, have called for “religion and ideology” to no longer count as a motivation for terrorist acts.
The reasoning seems pretty clear.
It means that when a Muslim, inspired by the Quran and emulating the deeds of Mohammad, kills infidels while yelling something about Allah being great… it can’t be called terrorism.
Instead, we could just call it… Monday. Or Tuesday. Or Wednesday. Thursday through Sunday are also options.
And just like that, faster than a jihadi can say Allahu Akbar, there’s no such thing as Islamic terrorism.
In a submission, the Muslim network argues that current laws marginalise their faith communities.
And it’s easy to see why.
When a member of the Islamic faith community seeks to intimidate or kill members of other communities that the Islamic faith community deems to be an inferior community — like, oh, I don’t know, the Jews — it does tend to marginalise the Islamic faith community.
Which is so impolite of the victims, really.
But it’s even worse than that.
The Muslim groups argue that current laws “disproportionately” target their communities.
It’s a mystery as to why.
According to ASIO, only 12 of the 16 terrorist attacks in Australia since 2014 were driven by “Islamist violent extremism”.
What are the odds that laws about terrorism would disproportionately affect the people disproportionately doing the terrorism?
Cue the world’s biggest eye-roll.
The Australian Muslim Advocacy Network argued:
“The persistence of this association between Islam and terrorism in official discourse – whether through prosecutions, political statements, or legislative design – has lent credibility to the false and dangerous notion that Islam itself is a source of violence.”
Translation: Please stop noticing the pattern.
It has evidently not occurred to these Muslim groups that the persistence of the association between Islam and terrorism is due to the persistence of Islam motivating terrorism.
It also apparently never occurred to them that the easiest way to break the association between Islam and terrorism would be to renounce the verses, preachers, and historical precedents calling for — how to put this? — jihad.
But that’s much harder than chanting “Islamophobia” and hoping everyone feels too guilty to ask follow-up questions.
Addled Allies
The Muslim groups are being supported in their bid to have the definition of terrorism changed by none other than the Anglican Church.
The Australian reports that:
“Anglican organisations supported changes to remove religion as a form of terrorist motivation in solidarity with Muslim groups.”
Jesus said to “pray for those who persecute you“, not to stand in solidarity with them.
How strange that the Anglican Church stands in solidarity with Muslim groups trying to downplay jihad rather than with Jews, who are typically the target of jihadis.
And if they won’t defend Jews, will they not at least defend their own people?
Or have they forgotten how Al-Shabaab terrorists surrounded a workers’ camp in Kenya and ordered those who could not prove they were Muslims to lie on the ground before spraying them with bullets.
Most of the 36 people murdered were… Anglicans.
Just weeks earlier, they had stopped passengers on a Nairobi-bound bus and killed the 28 Kenyans who could not recite the Muslim statement of faith known as the Shahada.
But don’t worry, says the Anglican Church: Islam has nothing to do with such incidents. Solidarity first, memory second, theology last.
The Australian Human Rights Commission also backed the Muslim groups with its own warning that linking religion and terrorism “stigmatises” faith groups.
Well, cry me a river.
We wouldn’t want a particularly religious group to be stigmatised by the 9/11 Twin Towers Attack.
Or by the Charlie Hebdo attacks.
Or by the Manchester Arena Bombing.
Or by the Berlin Christmas Market Attack.
Or by the Bataclan Theatre Massacre.
Or by the Nice Truck Attack.
Or by the Orlando Pulse Nightclub Attack.
Or by the Stockholm Truck Attack.
Or by the Strasbourg Christmas Market Attack.
Or the Crocus City Hall bloodbath.
Or by another 100 bloody massacres — that’s just off the top of my head — committed by men declaring “Allah is the Greatest” while pursuing the 72-virgin bonus plan.
Fortunately, we have the Australian Human Rights Commission standing up for the wishes of those stabbed, shot, beheaded and burned that Islam isn’t stigmatised on account of their murders.
God — by which I mean one other than Allah — help us. Because the AHRC certainly won’t.
Removing religion and ideology from terrorism law might make some people feel better, but it would weaken the law and make it harder to enact and get justice for victims.
Not acknowledging primary motivations does not make those motivations go away. Pretending doesn’t make it so.
Let’s hope — for once — the Albanese Government rejects the madness and leaves the definition of terrorism to reality, not to lobby groups desperate to escape it.
___
Republished with thanks to The James Macpherson Report. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
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we can go through every single religion and find a laundry list of pointless atrocity in gods name
and the problem is always some loudmouth rulebound unpleasnt antisocial faction driving in the pursuit of the usual things
money, power , bigotry, smug superiority
its the nature of man and absolutely the nature of men organised into sects and creeds and faiths
you dont have to imagine the patriach of the russian orthodox church blessing men and weapons aimed then fired at another deeply christian nation
because you can google it
Within the very pages of the Bible we can find the reasons why it was wrong for the Patriarch to do that. When people don’t act according to the teachings of their religion that is one thing.
Within the very pages of the Koran we can find justification for the terrorism that is perpetrated.
This is the difference and it is a critical one.
Where a professed Christian does an evil act it is against the teachings of scripture.
Where a professed Islamist does the same act it is according to the teachings of their scripture.
Very sad, but I guess it’s just the next step up from the law of not being able to criticise the Muslim religion!
Why should we change our laws to accommodate immigrants. If you choose Australia as your country of choice and settle here then our laws and customs need to be accepted by you. Accept our culture and laws and be happy.
if angry, stupid young men accept the words of angry, stubborn old men its usually women and children pay the price
its usually schools and hospitals and administrative structures and utilities targetted and for the deliberate or purposful twisting of wise words we end up in the dark and ruin and stinking limepits full of innocent bystanders
show me a religion or cult of personalty that hasnt ended up going down this road
it was a deeply religious man who pitted two rivals against each other for a decade, gleefully supplying weapons money and advice to both
that man was ronald reagan and he used saddam to further americas best interests and to bleed out those he disagreed with
osama bin laden was used by christians to attack an enemy, again ronald wilson reagan and his team
look at the price payed for that, an empire on its knees and a sea of blood stretching 3 continents
when young fools listen to old ones
Thank you for exposing this issue James and the implications. Its beyond belief the Anglican church would back such a law and point of view, but in saying that we have seen forms of apostacy arise over history.
The clever ploy of trying to cover up what Islamic extremists are planning should make all Australians go on high alert for this is indeed a serious issue to our national security, our local and state governments and to our Federal Govt.
The only reason I can see for the blindness of the Govt (and now Anglican church- though not all would agree with the current view on this topic so far is the verse from Thessalonians where it says God ‘sent a delusion’ upon those who do not believe – who reject God and His truth and word and sovereignity.
May we all be in prayer for the Federal Govt and PM at this time to have their eyes opened to the danger this will bring in, unless they block such a law. It would just open the door wide open to radical Islam and to terrorist atatcks, as instead of hiding their agenda to take over society and the nation, the rest of the violent agenda would come to pass. May God bring down such a plan and bring it to naught while there is still time.
“It has evidently not occurred to these Muslim groups that the persistence of the association between Islam and terrorism is due to the persistence of Islam motivating terrorism.