For decades I have been worried about anti-Muslim bigotry in this
country, especially since 9/11. I’m not sure how often I have done
something really significant about it- unless expressing support for the
Palestinians counts, in which case I have done a lot (including at
least one very visible effort). I think that yesterday’s attack in San
Diego might be the first fatal attack on a mosque here. There have been
many other manifestations of anti-Muslim bigotry in America, including
some deadly violence. Trump has done a lot to fuel that bigotry here,
especially with his first-term Muslim travel ban and his second-term
suggestions that it would be appropriate to get Palestinians to leave
Gaza permanently and that it would be appropriate to destroy, as in
commit genocide against, the Iranian nation-state. And there’s been tons
of smaller stuff as well.
I’ll be honest, in the same spirit of saying that all white people are
at least a tiny bit racist, as a Christian I have had occasional
anti-Muslim thoughts. It’s so minor it’s barely worth mentioning, but
since I am writing this, I should say that I think that in recent years I
may have slightly or significantly discounted the progress made in the
Muslim world when it comes to how women are treated by men and
male-dominated institutions. In the last few years I have been
pleasantly surprised by how many news articles quote Gaza women (for
example)- to be honest, I DID think they would be discouraged by men and
other women from speaking to the media. People who are much worse than
flawed Christian allies of America’s Muslim population should consider
that Sharia has been mentioned enough already.
I’m embarrassed by that oversight of mine for at least a few reasons and
one of them is that I have read, at least once, the argument that
anti-Muslim bigotry in America today resembles the anti-Catholic bigotry
that occasionally surged and retreated in this country over the decades
until about the 1940s (I think it has surged a little bit since then in
terms of left-wing ignorance about Catholic politics). I used to be
Catholic (I’ve sort of started converting to the Episcopalian Church)
and I experienced anti-Catholic bigotry in this country at least two or
three times (I also kind of experienced it in Northern Ireland twice).
I could be better equipped to do this- although I set out to read the
Koran about 6 and 1/2 years ago, I only read about 5% of it and then the
pandemic distracted me. The part I read didn’t contain anything I found
offensive. I get the impression there’s a fair amount of politically
good stuff in that book, just like there is in the Bible. We need to
remember a handful of facts- Muslims believe that Christ was an
important prophet and the Angel Gabriel appears in both books. Many
people use the term “Abrahamic” to refer to Islam, Judaism and
Christianity, and I believe strongly that we all pray to the same God.
Would I say that non-Muslims should never criticize certain tendencies
(sexism and homophobia) in the Muslim world in order to avoid
encouraging religious bigotry? No. But we should blend critical
statements about them with positive ones about Islam and the Muslim
community. We should make more efforts to build bridges in every sphere
of life with Muslims. We should understand that the Palestinians have
very legitimate national grievances and aspirations and reject the
Israel lobby’s demonization of them. We should ask the US military if
they would act the way they did in Iraq 2003-2008 if they found
themselves policing a rocky Peace Process in N. Ireland.
We need to stand with our Muslim brothers and sisters at this time and
in general and whenever hatred for them raises it’s ugly head.
My blog’s name is sort of “The Black And The Green,” which is a reference to past and present solidarity between Black Americans (and Americans of color in general) and Irish people living under British rule in Ireland. See the post in January of 2009 and “Black and Green” in the label cloud.
About My Blog
My blog is about history, popular culture, politics and current events from a democratic socialist and Irish republican perspective. The two main topics are Northern Ireland on one hand and fighting anti-Semitism, racism and homophobia on the other. The third topic is supporting the Palestinians, and there are several minor topics. The three main topics overlap quite a bit. I have to admit that it’s not going to help me get a graduate degree, especially because it’s almost always written very casually. But there are some high-quality essays, some posts that come close to being high-quality essays, political reviews of Sci-Fi TV episodes (Star Trek and Babylon 5), and a unique kind of political, progressive poetry you won't find anywhere else. (there are also reviews of episodes of Law and Order: Special Victims Unit and reviews of Roseanne)
(The "Table of Contents" offers brief descriptions of all but the most recent posts)
Monday, May 25, 2026
The Anti-Muslim Attack In San Diego
Below is something I submitted to the daily Camera a week ago about the 5/18 attack on a San Diego mosque. It probably won't be published at this point. You should read a CNN.COM article here. It basically says that an effort was made to deny mosques DHS funding for security about a year ago.
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