Don't jump on the Christie bandwagon. My test? He REFUSES to Invest NJ Money in Israel Bonds. Indiana has invested $30 million
Chris Christie's Islam Problem
By Daniel Pipes and Steve Emerson
New Jersey governor, who many are advising Mitt Romney to take as his veep, has repeatedly sided with some nasty characters
http://www.JewishWorldReview.com | AQuinnipiac poll in April showed Chris Christie as the most popular potential Republican vice-presidential candidate, thanks to his budget cuts and standing up to government employees' unions. But the governor of New Jersey has a problem, specifically an Islam problem, that can and should get in the way of his possible ascent to higher office. Time and again he has sided with Islamist forces against those who worry about safeguarding American security and civilization.
Some examples:
2008: When serving as U.S. attorney for New Jersey, Christie embraced andkissed Mohammed
Qatanani, imam of the Islamic Center of Passaic County, and praised him
as "a man of great goodwill." He did this after Qatanani had publicly ranted against
Jews and in support of funding Hamas, a U.S. government�designated
terror organization, and on the eve of his deportation hearing for not
hiding an Israeli conviction for membership in Hamas. In addition,
Christie designated a top aide, Assistant U.S. Attorney Charles McKenna,
to testify as a character witness for Qatanani.
2010: After Derek Fenton burned three pages of
a Koran at a 9/11 memorial ceremony, his employer, New Jersey Transit,
got Christie's approval to fire him. Protecting Islam at the expense of
the constitutional right to free speech, Christieendorsed Fenton's
termination: "That kind of intolerance is something I think is
unacceptable. So I don't have any problem with him being fired." The
American Civil Liberties Union successfully represented Fenton to get his job back.
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2011: Christie appointed an Islamist,
Sohail Mohammed, to the New Jersey state superior court. Mohammed's
record includes serving as general counsel to the American Muslim Union (which has stated that a "Zionist Commando Orchestrated The 9-11 Terrorist Attacks"), acting as spokesman for Muslim prisoners who went on a hunger strike after being jailed during Ramadan, defending Palestinian
Islamic Jihad operative Sami Al-Arian (his indictment, Mohammed said,
was "nothing but a witch-hunt"), and helping Qatanani's legal defense.
Mohammed established himself not just as the Islamists' lawyer but as
one of them.
When members of New Jersey's Senate
Judiciary Committee asked Mohammed appropriately tough questions about
his enthusiasm for Islam's archaic law code, the Shari'a, Christie ridiculed the
lawmakers: "Shari'a law has nothing to do with this [appointment of
Mohammed] at all. It's crazy. It's crazy. . . . So, this Shari'a law
business is crap. It's just crazy. And I'm tired of dealing with the
crazies. I mean, you know, it's just unnecessary to be accusing this guy
of things just because of his religious background." For this outburst,
unsurprisingly, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) thanked and applauded Christie.
2012: The revelation that the New York Police Department had conducted surveillance of
Islamists in the New Jersey towns of Newark and New Brunswick prompted
not gratitude but outrage from Christie, who termed the action arrogant
and paranoid while mocking NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly as "all
knowing, all seeing."
In short, Christie has hugged a
terrorist-organization member, abridged free-speech rights, scorned
concern over Islamization, and opposed law-enforcement counterterrorism
efforts. Whenever an issue touching on Islam arises, Christie takes the
Islamist side against those � the DHS, state senators, the NYPD, even
the ACLU � who worry about lawful Islamism eroding the fabric of
American life.
Two factors render this pattern
especially curious: First, soft-on-Islamism policies are common among
Democrats but rare among Republicans (Grover Norquistbeing the major exception). Second, Christie takes an ostentatiously pro-Israel stance, as reflected by his speeches and his recent "Jersey to Jerusalem" trip;
this makes him unusual, for a pro-Israel stance typically goes
hand-in-hand with concern about Shari'a. How does one reconcile the
Christie contradiction?
It could be ego: The governor is more brilliant than we are. It could be that, other than fiscally, he is not a conservative. Or, as several analysts suggest,
it could be cynical double pandering: Muslims get what they want most
and Zionists get what they want most, with each side ignoring what
Christie does for the other. Indeed, Senator Joseph Lieberman of
Connecticut pursued this double-track policy (soft
on Islamism, staunch on Israel) and he became the Democrats'
vice-presidential candidate in 2000, when practically no one noticed the
contradiction.
Whatever his reasons, we conclude that
Chris Christie lacks the moral compass and integrity needed to serve as
vice president of the United States.
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Daniel Pipes is president of the Middle East Forum and Taube distinguished visiting fellow at the Hoover Institution.
Steven
Emerson is an internationally recognized expert on terrorism and
national security and considered one of the leading world authorities on
Islamic extremist networks, financing and operations. He now serves as
the Executive Director of The Investigative Project on Terrorism, one of
the world's largest archival data and intelligence institutes on
Islamic and Middle Eastern terrorist groups.
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