GOP 2016 frontrunner Donald Trump
goes 'On the Record' to say he 'absolutely' means it when he calls
for 'total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United
States'
Posted December 07, 2015
Video
Trump Calls To Ban All Muslims From Entering US
Republican frontrunner wants ‘total and complete shutdown’ of
borders to Muslims after San Bernardino shooting in latest
boundary-pushing proposal
By Ed Pilkington
Donald Trump, the leading contender to become the Republican
party’s nominee for US presidential candidate, has called for a
“total and complete shutdown” of the country’s borders to
Muslims in the wake of the San Bernardino terrorist attack.
Trump made his most extreme pledge yet – in a race in which he has
consistently pushed the boat out on issues of race and
immigration – in a statement released to the media through his
presidential campaign team.
He said there was such hatred among Muslims around the world
towards Americans that it was necessary to rebuff them en masse,
until the problem was better understood.
“Until we are able to determine and understand this problem and
the dangerous threat it poses, our country cannot be the victims of
horrendous attacks by people that believe only in Jihad, and have no
sense of reason or respect for human life,” the billionaire real
estate developer said.
Trump put out his incendiary proposal just hours before he was
scheduled to appear at a rally on board the USS Yorktown, a second
world war aircraft carrier that is berthed near Charleston, South
Carolina. The military location was carefully chosen for an address
that falls on the 74th anniversary of the Japanese attacks on Pearl
Harbor that brought America into the war. After being interrupted
several times aboard the ship, he said the proposal was “probably
not politically correct, but I don’t care”.
To justify his extreme call for a total rejection of all Muslims
seeking to enter the US, Trump turned to what he claimed to be
polling data that underlined what he said was the violent hatred of
followers of the faith toward Americans. However, the statement
cites the Center for Security Policy, an organisation branded
extremist by anti-race-hatred campaigners at the Southern Poverty
Law Center.
“Shariah authorizes such atrocities as murder against
non-believers who won’t convert, beheadings and more unthinkable
acts that pose great harm to Americans, especially women,” Trump’s
“policy statement” said.
The former reality TV star added: “Without looking at the various
polling data, it is obvious to anybody the hatred is beyond
comprehension. Where this hatred comes from and why we will have to
determine.”
Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski said Trump’s proposed
ban would apply to “everybody”, including Muslims seeking
immigration visas as well as tourists seeking to enter the country.
Another Trump staffer confirmed that the ban would also apply to
American Muslims who were currently overseas – presumably including
members of the military and diplomatic service. “This does not apply
to people living in the country,” Trump said in an interview on Fox
News, “but we have to be vigilant.”
In an interview with the Guardian, Trump senior policy adviser
Sam Clovis said: “I don’t think there is anything wrong about asking
about religious affiliation.”
Trump has come under fire before for his contentious views on how
to deal with the threat of domestic radicalization of Muslims. He
has refused to rule out creating a government
database of all American Muslims.
Since the
Paris attacks orchestrated by Islamic State, and last week’s
attack in San Bernardino, California
by a married couple inspired by the terror group, Trump has
sought to build his already substantial lead over his Republican
presidential rivals by portraying himself as being tougher than all
others on national security.
He responded
in a tweet on Sunday night to President Obama’s Oval Office
address on combating the Isis threat by saying: “Is that all there
is? We need a new President – FAST!”
In his address to the nation on Sunday night, the president was
at his most passionate when he made an appeal to Americans for
tolerance in the aftermath of the California shooting.
Obama specifically sought to underscore that while Muslims have a
responsibility to identify and reject extremism within their ranks,
Americans cannot lose sight of the fact that the vast majority of
Islam’s more than a billion followers are peaceful.
President’s rare address from
the Oval Office
“We cannot turn against one another by letting
this fight be defined as a war between America and Islam,” Obama
said. “That, too, is what groups like Isil want. Isil does not speak
for
Islam. They are thugs and killers. Part of a cult of death. And
they account for a tiny fraction of a more than a billion Muslims
around the world, including millions of patriotic Muslim Americans
who reject their hateful ideology.
“Muslim Americans are our friends and our
neighbors. Our co-workers. Our sports heroes. And, yes, they are our
men and women in uniform who are willing to die in defense of our
country,” he added. “We have to remember that.”
Trump’s threat was met with perplexed anger on the
part of prominent Muslim American groups. Ibrahim Hooper, spokesman
for the largest such group, the Council on American-Islamic
Relations,
said on Twitter: “Where is there left for him to go? Are we
talking internment camps? Are we talking the final solution?”
Republican presidential rival Lindsey Graham, one
of a number who have seen their prospects of making headway in the
campaign subsumed by Trump’s dominance, said: “What has been in the
past absurd and hateful has turned dangerous.”
He told the Guardian: “Donald Trump today took
xenophobia and religious bigotry to a new level. His comments are
hurting the war effort and putting our diplomats and soldiers
serving in the Middle East at risk. The way to win this war is to
reach to the vast majority of people in Islamic faith who reject
Isil and provide them the capability to resist this ideology.
“Today’s statement embraces a ‘fortress America’
approach, is doomed to fail and shows a complete lack of
understanding by Donald Trump as to what the war is all about. As to
interpreters and others who have helped American military in Iraq
and Afghanistan, this policy, if enacted, would be a death
sentence.”
Trump’schoice of polling data to
hold up his highly controversial views was in itself inflammatory.
He cited data that purported to show that a quarter of those Muslims
polled – Trump did not specify what the sample group was, nor even
what part of the world he was referring to – “agreed that violence
against Americans here in the United States is justified as a part
of global jihad”.
More than half of the unspecified sample group
“agreed that Muslims in America should have the choice of being
governed according to Shariah”.
The data was drawn from the Center for Security
Policy, a neoconservative thinktank based in Washington DC whose
founder and president, Frank Gaffney, is a prominent US Islamophobe.
The Southern Poverty Law Center, which monitors hate speech in the
country, has described Gaffney as being “gripped by paranoid
fantasies about Muslims destroying the west from within”.
The SPLC said that “Gaffney believes that
‘creeping Shariah’, or Islamic religious law, is a dire threat to
American democracy”.
In 2011, Gaffney, a former Pentagon official in
the Reagan administration, was barred from the influential
Conservative Political Action Conference having suggested that two
of its organizers had connections to the Muslim Brotherhood.
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