Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Why are Michigan Muslims voting Republican? - DailyKenn.com

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Michigan Muslims are heading to the poles in droves today to vote for a Republican. 

An Imam told his Islamic followers it was their duty to vote in the GOP presidential primary and vote against Donald Trump. 


Trump notoriously said he wants to ban Muslims from entering the nation. 


A chief motive behind opening our nation's borders is to disrupt the democratic process. Most migrants from Islamic countries support liberal Democrats. Sometimes that support is expressed by participating in Republican primaries. 


Were a Baptist preacher to tell his congregation how to vote, he would jeopardize the church's tax exempt status. When Muslim's use their pulpits for political reasons, they are given a pass. There is no separation of mosque and state. 


Kenn interviews Colin Flaherty
 

From bostonglobe.com:


The imam’s words poured out in slow, deliberate English, his message as clear as the crystal chandelier hanging from the ceiling of the green-domed mosque.

Vote, he told the congregation populated mostly by Iraqi Muslims. It is their “moral duty” to be heard in Michigan’s presidential primary Tuesday, said the cleric during last Friday’s afternoon prayer service.

He did not specify for whom — other than “not a Republican,” least of all, Donald Trump.

The large Muslim community in this diverse Detroit suburb, home to Ford Motor Co. headquarters, has grown increasingly alarmed amid rising Islamophobia many here attribute to Trump’s divisive rhetoric. The GOP front-runner has called for a ban on Muslims entering the country, the surveillance and shuttering of mosques, and the registration of Muslims living in America.

Interviews in recent days with Muslim residents of Dearborn — and participants at a Trump rally a short distance away — showed the deep chasms and resentments that are fueling emotions in this presidential election. Trump has a lead in polls of Michigan Republican primary voters, and Muslims like Hassan Qazwini, the visiting imam at the Az-Zahra Islamic Center just outside Dearborn, are fearful about the message another victory for the businessman would send.

“Not only Muslims should be alarmed,” Qazwini said. “All these freedom-fighting democracy-loving people should be alarmed by the rise of a man like Donald Trump.”

The 52-year-old cleric knows that his words, videotaped to be posted later on YouTube, will echo far beyond the 300 men and women kneeling before him on the plush red carpet. As leader of Dearborn’s Islamic Center of America, the largest mosque in the country, until last year, he has had an audience with Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama. His opinions matter.

Qazwini compared Trump to Adolf Hitler and accused him of “brainwashing” people with “an agenda based on hatred and bigotry.”

“Inshallah,” he said, using the Arabic term for “God willing,” “I hope the people of this country will heed this warning.”

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