Why a British Muslim Is Suing the Southern Poverty Law Center by Chris Tomlinson 29 Aug 2017
British Muslim reformer Maajid Nawaz is suing the far-left Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) after the group denounced him in a report calling him an anti-Muslim extremist.
Earlier this year, Mr. Nawaz announced that he would be seeking damages from the SPLC along with several Christian groups after being put on a “hate list”. The list, referred to as a “Field Guide to Anti-Muslim Extremists” by the SPLC, put Nawaz and several conservative Christian groups along side extremists like the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) and members of actual neo-Nazi organisations.
In a video statement put out on YouTube in July. Nawaz said: “The Southern Poverty Law Center, or SPLC, who made their money suing the KKK, was set up to defend people like me but now have become the monster they have claimed they wanted to defeat.”
Nawaz was placed on the hate watch list alongside Somalian-Dutch national Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a former Muslim and anti-Islam activist who lives under constant security protection because of threats to her life from radical Islamic adherents.
Founder of the Quilliam Foundation, named after 19th-century British convert Abdullah Quilliam, Nawaz has taken many stances against radical Islam. Having been a former radical Islamist himself, spending several years in an Egyptian prison, he became disillusioned with political Islam, leaving radical group Hizb-ut-Tahrir in 2007.
Since then, Nawaz has called for reform of Islam and is widely seen on the left side of the political spectrum having written for publications like The Guardian, The New York Times, and the Daily Beast. He also hosts a radio show on UK broadcaster LBC every weekend.
According to the SPLC, Nawaz is an extremist because he allegedly accused non-violent Islamists of sharing the same ideology as violent Islamists. The SPLC claimed this action “demonized Muslims” citing a statement made in the Guardian by “an official with Scotland Yard’s Muslim Contact Unit.”
The SPLC also damns Nawaz for statements made by former English Defence League leader Tommy Robinson who claimed that Quilliam paid him cash,” to allow Nawaz to take credit for what he was already planning to do,” when he left the English Defence League in 2013.
The move from the SPLC to place Nawaz and several Christian conservative groups on a watch list is new for Nawaz but not new for conservatives.
The list also, according to Nawaz, puts his safety in jeopardy. In his July statement, he said: “Placing my name on a list like this not only smears my name but also puts me in physical danger.”
There is evidence in at least one case that an SPLC “hate list” inspired a man to commit an act of domestic terrorism. In 2012, a man named Floyd Lee Corkins III broke into the Family Research Council (FRC) offices with the intent of killing everyone inside. In a taped interrogation with the FBI, he admitted he found his target on an SPLC hate list.
The SPLC has also been slammed for putting Republican congressman Steve Scalise on one of its hate lists after he was shot earlier this year by a far-left extremist who attempted to assassinate several Republicans at a baseball practice. The SPLC even admitted the shooter “liked” their Facebook page.
The influence of the SPLC is not only limited to the United States as they have links to the George Soros-funded far-left Hope not Hate as both groups frequently cite each other’s work. Hope not Hate recently claimed they were expanding to the USA and bringing undercover informants.
Nawaz has started a crowd-funding campaign which he will need as the SPLC received multi-million dollar donations after the Charlottesville riots from people like actor George Clooney and the J.P. Morgan bank. Apple CEO Tim Cook also donated $1 million and set up a scheme to match donations from Apple employees, as well.
“Reform Muslim” Maajid Nawaz’s Suit Against SPLC Is Meritless By Pamela Geller - on August 31, 2017
Has he hired a lawyer? Let alone actually filed suit?
Nawaz always gets the last laugh, exploiting the kuffar’s desperation for a true Muslim reformer. A true Muslim reformer is ….an apostate.
Nawaz is a carny barker. Don’t buy the snake oil he’s selling.
Maajid Nawaz was furious to have been included on the SPLC’s hit list along with the likes of…me. He raged: “I’m listed there with people such as Pam Geller? It’s unbelievable.” So he can say that about me but the SPLC can’t say that about him? His suit, if it ever materializes at all, is meritless.
He wrote in the Daily Beast:
Zitat And setting aside my disdain for naming any individuals on lists, to include me alongside Pam Geller is patently absurd. Pam Geller furiously opposed the Park51 Manhattan mosque project. I supported it. Pam Geller supported the anti-Islam British protest group EDL. By facilitating the resignation of its founder Tommy Robinson, I helped to render it leaderless till it practically fizzled out. Pam Geller has “expressed skepticism” about the existence of Serbian concentration camps. I have repeatedly referred to the genocide in Bosnia as having been a primary factor in my own anger and radicalisation as a youth. Pam Geller has called for Islam itself to be designated a “political system”, and to lose its constitutional rights as merely a religion. I am a Muslim who set up an organisation that campaigns to maintain a separation between Islam, and the theocratic Islamists who seek to hijack my religion. Need I go on?
Nawaz doesn’t realize that no one is exempt. He can insist it’s a religion of peace all you want, but the Left/Islamic propaganda machine will still call you an “anti-Muslim extremist” if you say the slightest critical word about Islam. And Nawaz’s attacks on me inevitably reinforce the attacks on him.
Nawaz’s Quilliam Foundation, supposedly a “moderate” organization, “came out in favor of the ‘Palestinian’ jihad against Israel and the ending of Israeli defensive operations. Also, when the Quilliam Foundation began, its founder Ed Husain attacked Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Ibn Warraq and others who speak honestly about the jihad threat — would a real opponent of jihad and Islamic supremacism do that? It has also been noted then that Husain ‘wrote disingenuously about Islamic teaching on apostasy and other matters, and ignored the deep scriptural, theological and legal foundations of Islamic violence and supremacism. Hardly a promising performance for a genuine reformer.’”
Nawaz’s Quilliam Foundation was founded by former members of the Islamic supremacist group Hizb ut-Tahrir, which calls for a worldwide caliphate. The Quilliam founders say they’ve rejected all that and are “moderates” now, but there are warning signs that they aren’t. The Quilliam Foundation is named after a 19th-century British convert to Islam, Abdullah (formerly William) Quilliam, who was hardly a “moderate.” In warning Muslims not to aid a British expedition into Sudan in 1896, he wrote: “For any True Believer to take up arms and fight against another Muslim is contrary to the Shariat, and against the law of God and his holy prophet. I warn every True-Believer that if he gives the slightest assistance in this projected expedition against the Muslims of the Soudan, even to the extent of carrying a parcel, or giving a bite of bread to eat or a drink of water to any person taking part in the expedition against these Muslims that he thereby helps the Giaour [Infidels] against the Muslim, and his name will be unworthy to be continued upon the roll of the faithful.” (Source)
Here's an interesting development which, of course, is receiving no attention from the MSM.
ZitatThe Southern Poverty Law Center transfers millions of dollars to offshore entities as part of its business dealings.
The Alabama-based 501(c)(3) tax-exempt charitable organization known for its “hate group” designations — which the media swears by — also “pays lucrative six-figure salaries to its top directors and key employees while spending little on legal services,” The Washington Free Beacon reported.
More from the Free Beacon:
"The SPLC has turned into a fundraising powerhouse, recording more than $50 million in contributions and $328 million in net assets on its 2015 Form 990, the most recently available tax form from the nonprofit. SPLC’s Form 990-T, its business income tax return, from the same year shows that they have “financial interests” in the Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands, and Bermuda. No information is available beyond the acknowledgment of the interests at the bottom of the form."
Amy Sterling Casil, CEO of Pacific Human Capital, a California nonprofit consulting firm, told the online news outlet that there is “no legitimate reason for any US-based nonprofit to put money in overseas, unregulated bank accounts.”
I’ve never known a US-based nonprofit dealing in human rights or social services to have any foreign bank accounts,” Casil said. “It is unethical for any US-based charity to invest large sums of money overseas.”