An October “community focus group” was billed by the FBI as an opportunity for Muslim and Arab leaders to “review” and provide “constructive feedback” on the bureau’s new web-based “game” designed to help ordinary young people identify extremists.
But many of the largest and most influential Muslim-American activist groups weren’t invited.
Of the six groups that Muslim-Americans feel represent their interests the most, according to a 2011 Gallup poll, only one got a seat at the FBI’s meeting.
The website — a “choose your own adventure”-style campaign aimed at young people called “Don’t Be a Puppet” — is full of quiz questions, graphics, and information. As first reported by the New York Times, each correct answer snips a tether attached to an animated puppet figure, until it is completely free and you’ve won.
Muslim, Sikh, and Yemeni leaders who were invited to weigh in, some of whom spoke to the Times shortly before the website’s expected release date, generally felt that it disproportionately focused on Islamic extremism rather than other forms of radicalism present in American society. They also worried it would inspire bullying and racism in schools.
The website’s release was delayed, but the FBI never responded to their requests to have another meeting to address those concerns, nor did it expand its focus group to hear from a broader base of community leaders.
“We were not present at the program’s preview,” Corey Saylor, a director at the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), wrote in an email to The Intercept. “The largest Muslim civil liberties and advocacy organization … and the FBI elects to exclude us.”
The FBI did not respond to repeated requests for comment about its guest list.
Edgar Hopida, the communications director for the Islamic Society of North America — the second-highest-ranked group on the list — told The Intercept he thought it was “odd … to have a program” like the counter-extremism site “when you don’t invite the big stakeholders” to weigh in. He said that “we would’ve had the same concerns” as other groups who were in attendance.
Representatives from the Muslim American Society in Washingon, D.C., the Mosque Cares organization (the Imam Warith Deen Mohammed Group), and the Islamic Circle of North America also confirmed that no one in their organization had been invited to attend. The national headquarters of the Muslim American Society did not respond to repeated requests for comment, but people who did attend the meeting did not mention its members being present.
Then again, it’s not clear their presence would have made a difference. “My experience with such events, and the details I have heard from this one, appear to be in line with this experience, that it is a box-checking activity so it can be said community groups were ‘consulted,’” Saylor wrote to The Intercept. “The reality is such groups are usually given only a taste and no real forum for partnership.”
The Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) was the only group on the Gallup survey’s list to attend.
MPAC has a reputation for being friendlier than other Islamic groups to the Obama administration’s effort to “counter violent extremism.”
And CAIR has a reputation for being the most confrontational.
The White House hosted a three-day summit on countering violent extremism in February, and has been planning new approaches including “community-led intervention,” many of which have been widely criticized by Muslim community groups because of the way they could turn their own towns into “mini-surveillance states” or police states.
Margari Aziza Hill, co-founder of the Muslim Anti-Racism Collaborative, wrote on the Islamic Monthly site that “the debate surrounding the Countering Violent Extremism Summit reflects schisms in the Muslim community.”
“The CVE as a framework for government engagement,” she wrote, pointing to MPAC as a supporter of the program, “is causing further fragmentation within the American Muslim community along racial, class, and ideological lines.”
Hill likened the current CVE efforts to the FBI’s widely criticized program nicknamed COINTELPRO — which involved targeting, surveilling, and discrediting civil rights leaders like Dr. Martin Luther King and began in the 1950s under orders from then-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. “With this historical knowledge then, many in the Muslim community have good reasons for looking at CVE programs not as partnerships between government and Muslim communities, but mechanisms of control. For them, CVE can be considered as consensual COINTELPRO,” she wrote.
If the FBI was hoping for a friendly audience in October that might support CVE, the bureau didn’t get it.
Hoda Hawa, director of policy and advocacy for MPAC, said she didn’t like what she saw. “The site itself was not exclusively tailored to countering ‘Muslim extremism,’” Hawa told The Intercept. “But it was disproportionately focused.”
She said the website included a “map of the world, of places where there were terrorist attacks,” and “most were attacks by people who were ‘Muslim extremists.’” Hawa said the fact that “Dylann Roof wasn’t on there” was telling.
Indeed, how the Charleston church shooting is identified — as terrorism, or not — has become something of a litmus test, distinguishing between those who use the word terrorism to describe any act of violence based on political grievances, and those who apply it only to violence committed by Muslims.
FBI Director James Comey was pilloried by the media, lawyers, and activists for disputing that the mass shooting in South Carolina was an act of “terrorism,” even going so far as to say he didn’t see the murders — of nine black churchgoers allegedly at the hands of a young man whose manifesto showed him to be a white supremacist obsessed with Hitler, the Trayvon Martin case, and the Confederate flag — as “political.”
Abed Ayoub, legal and policy director for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, told The Intercept that the FBI explained Roof’s absence on the map as missing because it’s part of an “ongoing investigation” — though the Justice Department has already charged him with murder, attempted murder, and use of a firearm all in the commission of a hate crime.
Ayoub noted that the map did include the Oklahoma City bombing, an attack committed by Timothy McVeigh, who maintained connections to white supremacist groups, but Ayoub also said he thought the website as a whole was flawed and improperly focused on Muslim-Americans.
“The website as a whole was poorly done,” he told The Intercept. “It’s outside the mission of the FBI … and would stigmatize students.”
Hawa said she is convinced that the game will have “negative consequences” in schools, such as increased bullying and targeting of specific students on account of their backgrounds.
“Teachers and students are emboldened to act like police officers” by playing the game and identifying behaviors linked to “violent extremism,” said Arjun Sethi, an adjunct law professor at Georgetown and director of law and policy for the Sikh Coalition, which was also consulted for the game. “It’s not clear that the FBI understands that.”
This video released last night about American ISIS-kids brought tears to my eyes:
http://southpark.cc.com/full-episodes/s19e07-naughty-ninjas#source=2b6c5ab4-d717-4e84-9143-918793a3b636:63a32034-1ea6-492d-b95b-9433e3f62f8d&position=1&sort=airdate
It distresses me that the title of this piece, plus the comments below, focus on who was or was not invited to preview this Stasi training tool, and not on the fact that it is a STASI TRAINING TOOL!
THINK for a moment: youth are being encouraged to spy and report on their classmates. When did we become East Germany?
It does not really matter they were not invited because almost all of these groups from CAIR and ISNA on down are nothing but kiss-ass organizations.
CAIR was not invited for a very good reason. They have deep ties to the MB, and were tied in to terror funding. Half a dozen of their former “officers” are doing Federal prison time.
Your source?
Read the wikipedia pages on CAIR and the Holy Land Foundation. Of course, wikipedia is not a primary source, but it does cite to sources, if you care to follow-up. I’m NOT presenting a balanced view, just the asked for support. You can read the cited pages in detail for more info. Besides, I thought the Holy Land Foundation case and CAIR’s ties to it were well-known?
From the CAIR wikipedia page:
“In 2007 the organization was named, along with 245 others, by U.S. Federal prosecutors in a list of unindicted co-conspirators and/or joint venturers in a Hamas funding case involving the Holy Land Foundation,[3] which in 2009 caused the FBI to cease working with CAIR outside of criminal investigations due to its designation.[4] CAIR was never charged with any crime, and it complained that the designation had tarnished its reputation.[5] It has also been criticized for allegedly publishing propaganda[6] and has been listed as a terrorist group by the United Arab Emirates.[7]”
“Critics of CAIR have accused it of having ties to Hamas. Federal Judge Jorge A. Solis said that there was evidence to show that CAIR has an association with the Holy Land Foundation, Islamic Association for Palestine, and Hamas. However, Judge Solis acknowledged that this evidence predates the official designation of these groups as terrorist organizations.[70]”
“The founders [of CAIR], Omar Ahmad and Nihad Awad, had earlier been officers of the Islamic Association of Palestine (IAP) and were described by a former FBI analyst and a US Treasury Department intelligence official as “intimately tied to the most senior Hamas leadership.”[73] Both Ahmad and Awad participated in a meeting held in Philadelphia on October 3, 1993, and this meeting involved senior leaders of Hamas, the IAP, and the Holy Land Foundation (which was designated in 1995 by Executive Order, and later designated in court, as an organization that had raised millions of dollars for Hamas).[74][75][76] Based on electronic surveillance of the meeting, the FBI reported that “the participants went to great length and expended much effort hiding their association with the Islamic Resistance Movement [Hamas].”[77] Participants at the meeting discussed forming a “political organization and public relations” body, “whose Islamic hue is not very conspicuous.”[78] Critics also point to a July 1994 meeting identifying CAIR as one of the four U.S. organizations comprising the working organizations of the Palestine Committee of the U.S. Muslim Brotherhood, the parent organization and supporter of Hamas.[79][80][81]”
From the Holy Land Foundation wikipedia page:
“Elashi, also a member of the founding Board of Directors of the Texas branch of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), was sentenced to 65 years.” (sentenced as defendant in Holy Land Foundation case for providing millions of dollars to Hamas).
Here are the wikipedia pages:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_on_American–Islamic_Relations
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Land_Foundation_for_Relief_and_Development
“quote”An October “community focus group” was billed by the FBI as an opportunity for Muslim and Arab leaders to “review” and provide “constructive feedback” on the bureau’s new web-based “game” designed to help ordinary young people identify extremists.” unquote
McCarthy’s ghost must be rolling on the floor in raucous, unmitigated laughter. Meanwhile, the ghosts of his opponents are gathering for the battle of the millennium, for survival of human dignity, privacy, and every other god given right you were born with. If you don’t believe it.. then don’t pick up a weapon to defend it when the time comes. And it WILL come.
“each correct answer snips a tether attached to an animated puppet figure, until it is completely free and you’ve won.”
I am howling with laughter! Margari Aziza Hill got it right–this is soooo COINTELPRO-Stasi. Little Billy ratting out his classmate. Everyone’s a spy–every coworker, every neighbor, every KID. And all of them trained through an online game! Who’s the puppet now, America?
Hi there WakeUpAmerica –
Yes, COINTELPRO ish is absolutely correct. However, I’m not sure I’m laughing. Everyone a spy? If you think about it, that’s pretty serious… ‘ “Teachers and students are emboldened to act like police officers” by playing the game and identifying behaviors linked to “violent extremism,” said Arjun Sethi…’ Isn’t having folks (even young ones) spy on each other a feature of totalitarianism. Which makes me wonder, if the REAL aim of this “game” isn’t the spying, tattling, or even incidental bullying.
So I share your concern, but maybe we shouldn’t be so quick to laugh this one off. So a h/t to hellfire, too: “Meanwhile, the ghosts of his [McCarthy’s] opponents are gathering for the battle of the millennium, for survival of human dignity, privacy, and every other god given right you were born with.”
Again, I’m shaking my head and wondering if there is any hope out there.
I assure you, my laughter is totally sarcastic. Having been a target of false claims and investigations and police harassment and surveillance, I know firsthand how utterly undemocratic and un-American this is. And how spiritually crushing.
But I do believe there is hope. We must vote third party. It doesn’t matter which party, just NOT one of the two parties that are always presented as our only realistic choices. A vote for a third party is a vote against the status quo. We need to send the message that we are done, and we will no longer prop up the same old system with our votes. Vote third party!
@WakeUpAmerica –
I can now understand —- sarcastic laughter, makes sense. I am sorry for what you have been through. Sorry to say, so many people are asleep to the dangers; I’m wondering if they will wake up too late.
Re: third parties —ya know, I’m not sure about voting for a third party myself (that’s another story, I guess), but I do look at the present candidates – in both parties and shake my head. The kind of President I’d like would probably never get elected. But I DO share your frustration; indeed, the stranglehold of the two parties has been a real problem. Can’t blame you and others for wanting NOT to prop up that old system, as you say.
Here is how I see it–if we continue to do the same thing every election (i.e. choose the lesser of two evils) we can’t really expect a different result. (Was it Einstein who said the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result?)
Voting third party will not immediately get us the leadership we want, but it could get the attention of Republicans and Democrats. Imagine if our next president “won” with only 30% of the vote. It seems like that might send a message.
Maybe not. Maybe it’s already too late, but if we don’t do SOMETHING, we’re like lambs to the slaughter.
Most white supremacists are actually right winged, which was the total opposite of Adolf Hitler who is was a (left) socialist. Most white supremacists don’t like people with color, Hitler disliked Jews, Gypsies and crippled people but adored the islam. The confederate flag however, is a flag. Neither left or right. It stands for freedom for most people but some think it stands for hatred. But it’s just a flag. Most people just think it’s a cool flag. Almost every old American car that drives around in Europe has a rebel flag, sticker or patch on it.
The CAIR can complain that they didn’t get invited, but I doubt the FBI wants to get involved with known organizations that are on their own watch lists for extremist groups.
the confederate flag was banned cause It was a symbol of racism…fine…in that vein…please ban the quran since it’s the reason for 9/11…Tennessee recruitment office…fort hood massacre…all violent murders on us soil…the quran is a symbol of violence and intolerance…
You think you’re fooling anyone by changing your name to bob?
5/10 trolling. Can do better.
@ bob
Please prove “the quran is the reason for 9/11″ and that it is a “symbol of violence and intolerance” meaningfully different from, qualitatively and quantitively, “the Bible”.
Thanks in advance. I’ll wait.
“the quran is a symbol of violence and intolerance…”
———————–
You are clueless.
For those who want to study the Quran based on traditional sources with an open mind, an excellent work on it is scheduled to be released on Nov 17.
Please see http://www.amazon.com/Study-Quran-New-Translation-Commentary/dp/0061125865/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1447317176&sr=8-1&keywords=The+study
It’s over 2000 pages and you can get a sample of it now by Googling it, or wait until its eBook version has been released on Nov 17.
“Adolf Hitler who was a (left) socialist” > but but…Hitler was a national socialist, not a fascist!!!
Uh-uh. And East Germany was a Democratic Republic.
@ bobby
True.
False. It is “right” on the political spectrum notwithstanding that the common understood right-left political spectrum is only of limited use–politically.
False. Most people understand it’s history of being the battle flag of the Army of Northern Virginia. Most people understand it was the battle flag of those who sought to preserve the immoral institution of slavery. And most people understand that it was the battle flag of TRAITORS to America who are lucky they weren’t all slaughtered or imprisoned after they lost their violent insurrection to cling to their immoral practice of slavery (which is not to say many Northern Americans didn’t benefit and purposefully profit from the institution of slavery as practiced in the South).
True. But it has a very negative connotation for tens of millions of people and to many others it is a symbol of traitorous armed insurrection against America.
False. Unless you are a bigot or a moron or some deluded son or daughter of the South (or one of their ideological fellow travelers somewhere else in America) who still can’t accept that their forefathers were vile bigots, slavers and slave traders and violent TRAITORS to America.
Bullshit. Unless you can prove such an assertion with linked data.
Here’s my question–why are you so ignorant of American history? Are you a willful bigot or simply stupid?