August 1, 2001, - 5:42 am

I Don’t Want My MTV

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Twenty years ago, MTV was born with video broadcast of the Buggles’ “Video Killed the Radio Star.” Whether or not video killed radio, MTV’s version certainly put American pop culture on life support.

As a member of that first MTV generation, I loved watching videos of artists MTV rocketed to stardom: Van Halen, Duran Duran, Michael Jackson, and The GoGos. My friends and I were mesmerized by the vivid colors, cool clothes, and unique hairstyles–eye candy to go with the songs we heard on the radio. We knew what it meant to say, “I want my MTV.”

But, this week, I won’t be celebrating with Kid Rock, Eminem, Britney, and MTV’s other creations. MTV’s two decades of marriage to American culture has degraded into a disaster. It’s time for divorce, not celebration.

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July 26, 2001, - 12:15 pm

Shut Up, Jimmy Carter

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Jimmy Carter is a lot like Muhammad Ali.

Ali could have retired as undefeated champion in his boxing career. But he couldn’t get enough of fame and fortune. So he returned to the ring when he had no business being there, and was beaten badly. Now, suffering from Parkinson’s disease and what appears to be brain damage from repeated blows to the head, Ali is a virtual walking vegetable, sadly still trying to make himself relevant.

Then, there’s Jimmy Carter. The former peanut farmer could have retired as repeatedly defeated champion.

He could have retired with his reputation as one of the worst presidents in modern history – both domestically and in the foreign policy arena. Or he could have retired from the spotlight as the president who told Playboy he had lust in his heart. And he could have stuck with his best skill – home-building for Habitat for Humanity, for which he’s been lauded as a better former president than holder of that office.

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July 20, 2001, - 1:11 am

God and White Republican Man at Yale

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Fifty years ago, William F. Buckley, Yale Class of ’50, wrote “God and Man at Yale: The Superstitions of ‘Academic Freedom.'” Buckley described his alma mater’s hypocrisy for moving away from virtue and individualism, and its phony claim to academic freedom and impartiality.

“[T]his attitude, acknowledged in theory by the University, has never been practiced,” Buckley wrote. “Academic freedom is a handy slogan that is constantly used to bludgeon into impotence numberless citizens.”

James Van de Velde knows this well. He’s the citizen whose life has been most bludgeoned by Yale.

Van de Velde is alive, but Yale has unjustly taken his life and dreams away from him. Academic freedom be damned.

A cum laude Yale graduate and rising star in the first Bush administration during his 20s, Van de Velde reached stratospheric heights as both a Naval intelligence officer (lieutenant commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve) and State Department operative and arms negotiator. In addition to his doctorate in international security studies from Tufts University’s Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Van de Velde held (and still has) a security clearance five levels above top secret.

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June 8, 2001, - 7:15 am

WNBA: Sports’ Big Joke is Closet Deception

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They’re baaaaack. And it’s scary.

Unfortunately, the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) is back for a fifth season of ennui, ineptitude and annoying invasion of the national airwaves.

Fittingly, the WNBA’s opening day was Memorial Day. It’s a sports league that’s been dead for four years. But like a stubborn, unwanted weed, it keeps rearing its ugly head. Nobody cares about women’s basketball, and the anorexic box office receipts and embarrassing television ratings prove it.

According to league-inflated numbers, attendance dropped to a paltry 9,072 per game, last year–and that includes cold bodies at the nearest cemeteries. Amazingly, the WNBA gets lower ratings than the XFL, the World Wrestling Federation’s pro-football league. The WNBA gets barely 0.5 in the ratings on both ESPN and Lifetime networks, and an anemic 1.4 on NBC (many of whose affiliates run old sitcom reruns instead of this ratings disaster). But the higher-rated XFL was killed after one season. Yet, in pro sports’ affirmative action sacrificial offering to the barren altar of Title IX silliness, the Wannabe Association gets to bother us for a fifth year. Even “Monday Night Curling” is more exciting, and it’s not real (it’s an “SCTV” sketch).

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May 18, 2001, - 1:07 am

Why We Need Racial Profiling

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“Profiling” may be the dirty word of the decade.

Like “racism,” it’s a key word inflamed by the civil rights victimology industry. A dynamite stick thrown around with very harmful results.

Unfortunately, even President Bush got caught up in the act. In October 2000, desperate to win Michigan and show politically correct moderation, candidate Bush joined the anti-profiling bandwagon. In the second presidential debate, when asked about racial profiling in stopping and/or arresting criminal suspects, Bush denounced the practice. He cited his buddy, Arab-American Senator (now Secretary of Energy) Spencer Abraham, and spoke of his opposition to racial profiling of Arab Americans.

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April 20, 2001, - 4:35 pm

Powell: Albright in GOP clothing

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Is Colin Powell Madeleine Albright in Republican clothing?

As Secretary of State, he’s acting more like her everyday. Minus the lipstick and ugly brooches.

That should trouble anyone disgusted by Clinton’s Keystone Kops foreign policy conducted by the secretary of state in a skirt.

Albright loved being a celebrity and its associated trappings. She loved meeting and hanging out with other celebrities, including friend Barbra Streisand. With international crises and U.S. interests at stake, Madam Madeleine was seen on “Entertainment Tonight” gushing over Babs’ final concert. Not to mention chilling on the set of her fave television show, mushroom-popping Aaron Sorkin’s “The West Wing.” When a men’s magazine named her to its “Top Ten Strangely Sexy Women” — a twisted list including Hillary Clinton — she was in ecstasy. Ditto for Barbara Walters’ fawning ABC profile.

Maybe Albright’s obsession with fame and schmoozing with Hollywood glitterati was a good thing. It took her away from fomenting even more trouble in every international crisis she stuck her pudgy little hands into, whether in the Middle East or Balkan states. Largely as a result of her activist meddling and nation-building, there is now more terrorism and strife in and around Israel than in two prior decades.

The Palestinian Authority she helped create is murderous, corrupt and symptomatic of her total emasculation of U.S. anti-terrorism policy. The crown jewels of Albright’s legacy: Palestinian children sent to fight Israeli soldiers, Palestinian snipers murdering innocent Israeli mothers and babies, and Palestinian terrorists creating whole families of new multiple-amputee Israeli children. And Kosovo is now worse off than if the U.S. had avoided its age-old civil war, according to a U.N. Commission on Human Rights report. Even pro-Clinton Newsweek Magazine said that under Albright, “U.S. efforts to lead have a faint air of desperation about them.”

And there are Sudan’s black slaves, who continue be sold by Arab Muslims for as little as $15 — tortured, raped and abused. Not a peep out of Madam Madeleine about this. Too busy speaking out on questionable foreign policy issues, like AIDS and women’s issues. Often joking that she had her political instincts surgically removed, it’s rather like a lobotomy.

Not to mention Albright’s botched State Department security, including the disappearance of laptop computers containing highly classified national security codes and intelligence information, Russian eavesdropping devices planted inside a State Department conference room, and spies posing as foreign journalists roaming unescorted and stealing documents from the desk of Albright’s executive secretary. Albright blamed U.S. diplomats. But as her friend Michael Dukakis once said, “A fish rots from the head down.”

The Czechoslovak-born Albright even had the gall to push for amending the Constitution so foreign-born Americans — particularly herself — can run for president. Indeed, she is Mad (-eleine Albright).

It’s as mad as Powell’s claim he’s a long-time Republican. In his 1995 best-selling autobiography, “My American Journey,” Powell said he is liberal on many issues. “Neither of the two major parties fits me. … The time may be at hand for a third major party to emerge.” “I admire … Bill Clinton.” During Clinton impeachment hearings, Powell’s daughter Anne got a coveted audition for co-host of ABC’s “The View,” during which she vehemently attacked Republicans and conservatives and stood up for Clinton and his private life. You can bet the young Powellette apple didn’t fall far from the tree. Her sister played a proud lesbian in an off-Broadway play, with Papa Powell gushing to the media.

Powell shares Albright’s taste for celebrities. But, even worse than attending their concerts, he’s consulting them on foreign policy. In March, he met for an hour with U2’s Bono about forgiving tax-funded loans to third-world nations. Wednesday, he met with Paul McCartney and girlfriend/model Heather Mills about their anti-landmine campaign. That’s supposed to be a defense issue. Apparently, one must be a has-been UK pop star to advise Powell on U.S. foreign policy. Who’s next, Elton John?

Then, there’s Powell’s Albrightesque behavior toward Israel. A Palestinian-sponsored torrent of terrorist bombings, shootings, and warfare now faces Israel on a daily basis. In the tradition of U.S. peace through strength defense policy, Israel responds, attacking those Palestinian installations fomenting the violence. And what does Powell do? He attacks Israel as “overreacting.” In Powell’s world, Israel should just accept the cold-blooded murder of its civilians within its own borders. Could this be connected with the $200,000 in speaking fees he accepted in November from the pro-Syrian, anti-Israel Lebanese Deputy Prime Minister Issam Fares? Powell already knew he’d be Bush’s Secretary of State when he delivered the paid Tufts University address, a huge conflict of interest.

Powell’s policies are no surprise. He’s the same guy who opposed the Gulf War. Being a “great military mind,” Powell opposed the engagement, predicting we’d badly lose in a ground war. As Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, he and Albright pushed Clinton for military involvement in Kosovo.

In Presidential debates, Bush promised a less-intrusive foreign policy without nation-building. Instead, he gave us an intrusive, nation-building, liberal Secretary of State who consults with foreign pop stars on foreign policy.

There’s a difference between Albright and Powell. A noxious presence, she did not carry Powell’s heavy conflict-of-interest baggage. In addition to questionable speaking fees, Powell was a large stockholder in America Online (AOL), sitting on its board. His son, Michael, now FCC Chairman, voted to approve the AOL-Time Warner merger, earning pops millions in increased stock option value when he exercised them. Now at State, Powell brought in crony AOL Time Warner Chairman Steve Case to consult and install State’s new computer system. All without a competitive bidding process. Suddenly, Powell is against sanctions, which he so adamantly supported during the Gulf War. Interesting, since Case wants to expand AOL’s empire to U.S.-embargoed nations. It’s not the only conflict of interest for the Powell family. Daughter Anne was suddenly named co-host of AOL Time Warner’s TBS network’s “War Games” show, while brother Michael regulates the company at FCC. The Powells are well-connected.

Which is why Powell, an Albright-clone, got the job. Sounding like Hillary, Laura Bush told Larry King, on Wednesday, that she helped Bush pick his advisers and staff. She said she was “proud that a lot of women are at the table.” Apparently Bush has a Clintonesque affirmative action staffing policy.

Clinton picked Albright because she was a woman. Did Bush — or his wife — pick Colin Powell merely because he’s black?

Unless it’s a mutual affinity for Beatles’ political advice, it sure seems that way.

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April 6, 2001, - 1:17 am

Enough to Make You Go Postal

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“Dear Little Laidy [sic]. How is school?” That’s the text on a postcard sent to Posey Cullen, 92 years ago, on Feb. 23, 1909. It just got delivered — last month!

Is that the United States Postal Service (USPS) “through snow, rain, and gloom of night”? Sounds more like the East Germans under communism.

No Saturday delivery? Cullen, then a student at Bethel College in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, missed her mail for almost a century of Saturdays. She’s probably dead. Postal workers, who found the postcard at a Cincinnati mail plant, hoped to deliver the postcard to her. Or, more likely, her descendants.

Cases like this are the reason USPS, which lost $199 million, last year, is on the verge of a $3 billion loss. It’s unreliable and serves a bad product. Even though it just raised the cost of stamps to 34 cents in January, the second such raise in two years, USPS now proposes canceling Saturday delivery and raising stamp prices, this time by 10 or 15 percent.
USPS isn’t being driven to ruin by tough competitors. Though e-mail and Internet services are great alternatives to unreliable, old-school snail-mail, it’s USPS that’s driving itself out of business. By attempting to legislatively protect its turf from true competition, languishing in anachronistic technology, and spending wastefully, USPS barely survives.

The postcard screw-up by USPS isn’t surprising because postal delivery is among the last industries in capitalist, free enterprise America that’s still an artificial, government-protected monopoly. An industry or company free of competition doesn’t have to compete. In the Post Office’s case, things get lost. They don’t get delivered on time. Businesses and people suffer. While the government sued Microsoft, the real outrage — the real monopoly — continues at USPS.

If the post office were privatized and companies like FedEx and UPS were truly allowed to compete, things would be different. President Reagan’s budget director, James Miller, found that USPS could save $6.6 billion (in 1988 dollars) by contracting out or privatizing various portions. But that never happened and won’t, under “private express statutes” for first- and third-class mail. USPS has expensive lobbyists and congressional committees solely for the purpose of overseeing it. It has powerful labor unions, making it virtually impossible to lay postal workers off. Incredibly, my mailwoman spends hours reading a book parked in her mailtruck, while millions in real businesses get pink slips. Going private and having to compete would end that.

And stop ridiculous witch-hunts like those the postmaster general and his postal inspectors conducted a few years ago. Several businesses that used FedEx and UPS were investigated and fined hundreds of thousands of dollars for not using USPS instead. Ludicrous laws, still on the books, mandate that businesses must use USPS, except in urgent emergencies.
Expensive postal lobbyists, which your stamps pay for, didn’t like competition from private PO box vendors, like “Mailboxes, Etc.” and “PakMail.” So they made a law, requiring users of those stores’ private mailboxes to designate “PMB” for “Private Mail Box” in their addresses. This harmed many small businesses owners who operate out of homes and used such private boxes to add legitimacy and privacy to their businesses. Let alone 24-hour access to PO boxes, which you can’t always get at the generally nine-to-five post office.

Investigations and anti-competitive laws aren’t the only stupid place your 34-cents-a-stamp goes. Remember Lance Armstrong’s heroic bicycle victories in the 2000 Summer Olympics and the elite Tour-de-France? I’m glad Armstrong overcame testicular cancer to win these races. But did my stamp money really have to go to finance USPS’ official sponsorship of his efforts? Sponsorships market businesses that must compete for consumers. Do we really have anywhere else to go for first-class mail? No. And USPS, to the tune of millions, was Armstrong’s and the U.S. Olympic Bicycle Team’s biggest sponsor. FedEx has stayed away from the Olympics, and even UPS walked away from Olympic sponsorship. But they must compete in the market and answer to shareholders, unlike USPS.
Then there’s 1999’s “Millennium Clock,” counting down-to the second-the time left to mail millennium greetings to your buddies. If held captive like most people suffering in the average long line at any U.S. post office, you were forced to watch the count down. Was this useless, expensive promotion really necessary? I knew the “Millennium” was coming without this costly reminder. Citizens Against Government Waste found that USPS loses at least $1 billion each year to waste, fraud and abuse, and another $84 million peddling products bearing postal logos.

There are also lazy postal execs we get to pay for. Last year, an audit revealed that USPS executives took chauffeur-driven limousines to and from work more than 500 times over the previous two years. According to the Washington Post, USPS spent $142,311 and $105,817, respectively, to move two executives just 10 and 30 miles. Did they use Lamborghinis for the move? USPS granted the questionable expenses, even thought the two continued to report to the same USPS headquarters in Washington and didn’t qualify for relocation benefits requiring new duty assignments and household moves of at least 50 miles. Expense allowances were granted to also cover new carpets, drapes, home alarm systems, and plumber’s bills. Would a company with competitors operate this way?
But even government monopolies can’t prevent or survive change. New technology, including the Internet, e-mail, and online bill paying are making USPS obsolete. That’s why it’s “partnering” with UPS and FedEx to use mailboxes and started eBillPay and online postage. But it is too little, too late.

And higher stamp prices with no Saturday delivery? It’s enough to make you “go postal.”

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April 3, 2001, - 1:25 am

Keep Celebrity Airheads Away From Government

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The guys in Aerosmith want a role in the Bush administration.

“I’m gonna ask Bush if he can make us ambassadors of rock ‘n’ roll,” the rock group’s lead singer, Steven Tyler, told USA Today recently. “Hey, Dubya — how about dubbin’ us?” lead guitarist Joe Perry said.

The guys from Aerosmith were probably just kidding about serving in government. But rock stars like to think of themselves as something more than airheads who know some good guitar riffs and wear tight leather pants. They crave respect and power in politics. And, with Barbra Streisand sending Congressional Democrats instructional memos on public policy and U2 lead singer meeting at length with Secretary of State Colin Powell, anything can happen. But if their track records are any indication, keep them far away from public policy.

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March 27, 2001, - 1:23 am

The Real “March Madness”

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It’s “March Madness,” the NCAA’s college basketball championship play-offs. But the real madness is off the court.

Shane Battier, the Duke forward and future NBA star, was selected Naismith College Player of the Year. An academic standout without a criminal record, Battier is rare. He plays trumpet, and “I might go home and listen to Beethoven and ponder Descartes,” he claims. Most college basketball players aren’t anything like Battier. Neither are most of their coaches. Or professors.

In Lubbock, former Indiana University basketball coach Bobby Knight was named head coach of Texas Tech. But not before being attacked by Tech faculty members, who signed their names to a petition opposing Knight, claiming he’d “cast a shadow on the school.” Professors, like Walter Schaller, posted “No No Knight” signs on office doors, according to The New York Times. In a move unprecedented for a prospective college coach, Tech’s Faculty Senate demanded that Knight attend an inquisition at its March 21 meeting.
How precious. Unlike most college sports coaches, Knight instills discipline in his players. And he’s paying for it, every step of the way. Not only did Indiana fire him, but Tech’s high and mighty faculty opposes him, too. While Knight might’ve been slightly overly exuberant in discipline methods at Indiana, it’s important that he did, indeed, discipline his players — something that happens far too infrequently in college sports, today. Knight’s athletes never committed crimes. The one — just one — who did, Sherron Wilkerson, accused of beating his girlfriend, was immediately off the team. And virtually all of Knight’s athletes graduated — rare in big-time college sports.

On the other hand, there are coaches, like Tom Osborne, now a Republican Congressman, who allowed criminal after criminal on his University of Nebraska football team. His athletes almost literally got away with murder — or at least, attempted murder. But, unduly revered as some sort of deity by Nebraskans and Nebraska’s faculty, as well as the local press, you’d never hear an unkind word about him. And if you did — as I found out last year — the author (in this case, me) would be attacked with hate mail from Osborne’s blind followers. There were never any anti-Osborne petitions from Nebraska’s faculty.

Maybe because they were impressed by his Ph.D. But probably because, despite claiming to be a conservative, Osborne treated the many criminal players on his team, like convicted thugs Lawrence Phillips and Christian Peter, the way Ted Kennedy liberals treat criminals — giving them chance after chance without punishment and shamelessly attacking their victims in the press.

Never any petitions against the win-at-all-costs, anti-discipline coach, Osborne, by professors. Just against Bobby Knight, who — against his own interests to win — was the exact opposite.

Nor have intellectual elitists ever signed petitions regarding student athletes, like Osborne’s, who’ve committed crimes and have been allowed to return to play on the field or court. Or student athletes who took ridiculously easy courses to graduate, yet didn’t know even the basics about anything.

That’s because many college professors buy into the liberal mentality of allowing college athletes, despite criminal proclivities, free passes through academic life because many are from the black underclass, even though most would hardly qualify to graduate high school. And academics hate conservative, disciplinarian coaches who actually believe athletes are responsible for their actions. Profs generally support that most schools and universities belong to and fund, with your taxes, the Center for Sports in Society and its national Consortium for Academics and Sports, apologists for college athletes and perpetuators of the myth that attacks on them constitute racism.

Wall Street Journal’s sports columnist Frederick C. Klein noted that, during his attendance at an academic conference on the evils of college sports, professors pontificated that athletes’ crimes and academic failings were no fault of their own — but that of their youth, bad upbringings and “the adults who manipulated them.”

Those professors who do demand even the very minimum in academic performance from college athletes are shunned.

Take University of Tennessee Professor Linda Bensel-Meyers. She analyzed transcripts of 39 Tennessee athletes, finding that some failed even phony “soft courses,” like “Jogging,” “Bowling” and “Walking,” aimed at keeping them academically eligible to play. Predictably, Tennessee and the NCAA whitewashed the university of any wrongdoing, and now, Bensel-Meyers — a Renaissance scholar, church organist, and mother of three sons — is a pariah for daring to harm Tennessee’s $44-million-a-year athletic program. She’s been threatened to the point that she no longer feels safe walking across Tennessee’s campus or working late in her office. No petitions, though — spineless Tennessee professors turned their backs on her.

Or, there’s Joseph Greer, a St. Bonaventure University sociology professor. In February, the Wall Street Journal profiled his plight. After failing a black college basketball player, Greer, a supporter of Jesse Jackson’s 1984 Presidential bid, was immediately fired and charged with racism. No petitions by professors, here, either.

And there’s University of Minnesota tutor Jan Gangelhoff, who blew the whistle on academic fraud, telling the press that she and other tutors wrote the papers of student-athletes. Instead of any athletes, professors, or athletic officials taking their deserved falls, only Gangelhoff was charged with felony fraud for doing athlete’s course work.

In a June 1999 Sports Illustrated article on Minnesota, a history professor said that when, during class, he asked student and now-NBA star shooting guard (Miami Heat) Voshon Lenard “why George Washington was considered a founding father, Lenard . . . responded, ‘George Washington . . . name sounds familiar. Can you give me a hint?'” Professors were often visited by then Minnesota basketball coach Lem Haskins, demanding leniency and injecting accusations of racism. Being spineless, they gave in.

Former Ohio State University linebacker Andy Katzenmoyer, SI reported, got through college with barely passing grades in courses, like “AIDS: What Every College Student Should Know” and “Golf.” Even many of those grades were changed by weak professors. Paula DiMarco, who taught “Introduction to Computer and the Visual Arts” didn’t want to tell SI why she changed Katzenmoyer’s E to a C-plus. “This is uncomfortable,” she said.

No kidding.

That’s a lot of unprincipled faculty members. And it’s likely similar at Texas Tech. But, still, the only faculty petition and demands made are against the only big-time coach who doesn’t engage in this kind of stuff, who doesn’t protect criminally-prone and academically inept athletes — Bobby Knight.

In 1999, Richmond, Calif., high-school basketball coach, Ken Carter, canceled practices and games and locked the gym until his students did better academically, which they did. Maybe Texas Tech’s profs will sign a petition against him, too.

But Knight has the last laugh. Despite elitist professors’ protests, he was hired. Now they will have to put up with Knight’s demands of crime-free and graduation-prone athletes.

The nerve of that man.

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March 16, 2001, - 1:02 am

Funding Islamic Hate

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Last week, the Rev. Jerry Falwell told Beliefnet.com, a religion website, that when it comes to applying for federal funds under President Bush’s proposed faith-based initiatives program, “Islam should be out the door before they knock. … The Moslem faith teaches hate.”

Falwell was swiftly attacked by Muslim groups and was forced to apologize, explaining to USA Today that he meant that any group that is anti-Semitic, racist or in any way bigoted should be disqualified from the funds. He clearly told Beliefnet, “I think that when persons are clearly bigoted towards other persons in the human family, they should be disqualified from funds.”

But my experience with President Bush’s star Muslim recipient of the proposed funds — Imam Hassan Qazwini, religious leader of Detroit’s Islamic Center of America mosque — illustrates that Falwell was right.

When he held his January press conference announcing the issuance of an executive order for the faith-based funds, President Bush featured Qazwini front and center, among the 35 religious leaders on stage with him. He introduced Qazwini, the only Muslim and Michigan’s only religious representative at the White House press conference, as “my friend from Michigan.” According to the Detroit Free Press, Qazwini met with Bush in Texas in December “to advise him on formulating the pair of executive orders issued” for federal funding of faith-based initiatives. Qazwini’s mosque will certainly be a major recipient of the funds.
But Qazwini’s receipt of tax-funds, let alone his close friendship with Bush and attendance at the White House, should disturb all Americans. When I attended Qazwini’s mosque on Nov. 15, 1998, it was one of the most frightening, hate-filled occasions I’ve ever experienced. On that day, at Qazwini’s invitation, the Nation of Islam’s Louis Farrakhan spoke to the mosque’s congregants and was received with a hero’s welcome. Qazwini and Osama Siblani, editor of the Arab-American News, introduced Farrakhan as “our dear brother,” “a freedom fighter,” and “a man of courage and sacrifice.”

Farrakhan’s same old anti-Semitic, anti-White canards were no surprise. It was the cheers and fervor of Qazwini and his congregation that were so chilling. Watching the audience of more than 1,000 Arab-American and Black Muslims who surrounded me in the mosque rising up and hatefully screaming about “the Jews, the Jews,” I realized how my grandparents must have felt in Nazi Germany.

During his hour-long rant, Farrakhan spouted his usual pap claiming the Jews control the U.S. government, saying that the “core message” of his speech was “the evil power of the ‘Zionists.’ … [They are] forces of evil.”

But, clearly, “Zionists” was his euphemism for the Jews. He shouted out Jewish-sounding surnames of Clinton administration cabinet members and asked the crowd, “Rubin, who is he? Cohen, who is he?” The audience stood up and — in an angry frenzy — shouted, “A Jew, a Jew!” (Actually, former Secretary of Defense William Cohen is not Jewish. He’s a Unitarian.)

Farrakhan denounced the Jews as “forces of evil. … We should perform a jihad (holy war). [They are] frightened, and we must frighten them even more.” This garnered thunderous applause and cheers from Qazwini and his congregants. He continued to describe Jews as “these people in positions of power with a Satanic mentality … [who] deceive us.” More cheers and applause from Qazwini and the crowd.

As Yale professor and black writer, Julius Lester once wrote about attending a Farrakhan event, “It is one thing to read the words of political, racial, and religious anti-Semitism in books; it is another to hear them spoken with intensity, urgency and conviction, to hear them affirmed with cheers, the stamping of feet, laughter, applause and arms thrust toward heaven.” My experience at Imam Qazwini’s mosque was identical to that — my experience at the mosque to which President Bush wants to give our tax money.

Ironically, this display of racism and bigotry, sponsored by Qazwini and his mosque, came within a week of Qazwini’s complaints about alleged bigotry against Arabs in the movie, “The Siege,” which had just come to movie screens at the time. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black.

This past Sunday, on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” Secretary of Education Roderick Page said that faith-based organizations “are very good at after school programs for kids. They teach kids things like empathy, compassion, tolerance.” But that’s hardly what they were teaching the many children who attended Farrakhan’s speech at Qazwini’s mosque. Yet, that’s, de facto, what the federal funds to faith-based organizations — at least in the case of Qazwini’s mosque — will go to.

While Bush appointee John DiIulio, who heads the new Faith-Based and Community Initiatives effort, maintains that “Washington’s not funding [religious beliefs],” it can’t help but indirectly fund the type of vitriol spewed by Farrakhan at Qazwini’s mosque. Even if there are strong restrictions on the use of the funds, the receipt of them will offset other amounts in the budgets of such bigoted religious organizations-offsets that will allow further funding of such racist speeches.

While there are Muslim leaders, like W. Deen Mohammed, son of the late Elijah Muhammed, who’ve abandoned the separatist, anti-White, anti-Semitic rantings of mainstream black Islam, the fact remains that, in poll after poll, Farrakhan is the most popular black leader, Muslim or otherwise. And the fact also remains that Qazwini’s mosque is one of the largest Arabic mosques in North America. Qazwini’s invitation to — in fact, promotion of — Farrakhan and his hate is typical of mainstream Arabic Islam.

If Qazwini’s Islamic Center of America is any indication — and it certainly seems to be — of the behavior of Islamic recipients of federal funds for faith-based initiatives, Falwell is right. They should be ineligible for taxpayer-funded means of spewing such hate.

But Bush feels he owes Qazwini and Muslims. Why is not clear. He met with Qazwini while campaigning in Michigan, and a coalition of major Muslim political groups, for the first time issued a “Muslim endorsement” of Bush for president. But their endorsement meant little, and their political power was overrated. Michigan, home to the largest concentration of Muslims and Arabs in North America, went for Al Gore. And even Arab-American Sen. Spencer Abraham lost his re-election bid.

While the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the Muslim Public Affairs Council both denounced Falwell’s comments, neither they nor Bush’s “friend from Michigan,” Imam Qazwini, ever denounced Farrakhan’s bigoted, hateful comments. And President Bush’s strong ties to Qazwini are troubling, especially with the advent of federal funding of faith-based initiatives — and Qazwini as Bush’s star recipient of them.

Bush should heed Dr. Julius Lester’s prescription regarding Farrakhan: “[T]o speak only of the man is wrong. Not to speak of the people who give him credence and legitimacy partakes of evil.”

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