Tuesday, December 20, 2011

CAIR Launches 2012 'Muslims Vote' Campaign


The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) today launched its 2012 "Muslims Vote" campaign designed to empower American Muslims by increasing their political capacity and presence.
CAIR's initiative -- launched two weeks before the January 3 Iowa Caucus -- includes a2012 presidential voter guide, an online voter registration tool, a video promoting online voter registration, and the Twitter hashtag "#MuslimsVote." CAIR has also mailed all presidential candidates its 2012 election questionnaire.
The Washington-based Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization's non-partisan voter campaign will focus on ensuring that American Muslims actively participate in the 2012 election cycle by volunteering in election campaigns, registering to vote, hosting candidate forums, and by mobilizing other community members through "get out the vote" initiatives.
CAIR will also pay special attention to Muslim voters under the age of 30 who -- like all Americans of that age -- are under-represented on voter rolls.
"We're calling on all American Muslims to fulfill their civic responsibility by doing their part in the upcoming presidential election," said CAIR Government Affairs Coordinator Robert McCaw. "We are committed to making sure our community's voice is heard in this critical election cycle."
"With large concentrations of Muslim voters in key swing states -- such as Ohio, Florida, Virginia, and Michigan -- the American Muslim community has the potential to be influential in determining the next president of the United States," said McCaw.
Components of CAIR's 2012 "Muslims Vote" election campaign include:
CAIR is America's largest Muslim civil liberties and advocacy organization. Its mission is to enhance the understanding of Islam, encourage dialogue, protect civil liberties, empower American Muslims, and build coalitions that promote justice and mutual understanding.

CONTACT: CAIR Government Affairs Coordinator Robert McCaw, Tel: 202-742-6448, E-Mail: rmccaw@cair.com; CAIR National Legislative Director Corey Saylor, 202-384-8857, E-Mail: csaylor@cair.com; CAIR National Communications Director Ibrahim Hooper, 202-744-7726E-Mail:ihooper@cair.com; CAIR Communications Coordinator Amina Rubin, 202-488-8787202-341-4171, E-Mail: arubin@cair.com 

Monday, December 12, 2011

Spare Ten Minutes a Day to Defend Your Bill of Rights


Stand up with America

Against Indefinite Detentions without Trial
The National Call In Week
To Mark the Bill of Rights Day

America was silent until ACLU and Muslim Peace Coalition USA started mobilizing against the indefinite detention without trial provision of NDAA. Now thousands of people are calling President Obama to do what Congress failed to do: to protect the US citizens from indefinite detention without a trial.
In New York, Boston, Chicago and many other cities there are demonstrations and actions planned for Thursday December 15th, 2011 which is an official Bill of Rights day. If your city, school or communities are planning an action on that day please add that information here so the others know about it as well. You can find other action ideas hereand here.
The NDAA bill passed by Congress is worse than the PATRIOT ACT. This bill contains some of the most dangerous provisions we’ve ever seen: it would allow the government to imprison anyone “suspected” of an offense deemed “terrorism-related” indefinitely and without trial or charges—even US citizens.
The president, the Department of Defense, the FBI, and a bipartisan block of senators all oppose this bill. Why is Congress trying to give the government powers it doesn't even want?
This is America. We have rights, and we demand that our government respects and protects them.

Call Your President Week:

  1. Call President Obama to fulfill his promise to veto indefinite detentions in NDAA 2012 bill: 202-456-1111. Tell him on this Bill of Rights Day he must defend our rights of trial by vetoing this bill
  2. Call ten friends, colleagues and relatives to call President Obama as well. Do it every day.
  3. Forward this action alert to your friends. 
  4. Your school:
    • Have your school assembly (fulltime as well as weekend) do a reading of bill of rights on December 15
    • Ask all students to write a letter to President Obama to veto it
  5. Your Masjid: Ask your Imam to
    • Give Khutba this Friday on the importance of justice, Bill of Rights & the Indefinite detention without trial
    • Make Dua after each Salat to guide our leaders towards justice
    • Get your interfaith partners to forward this alert to their lists

What is the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)?

The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) is a bill passed by the Congress in early December. It contains provisions that, if made law, would order the military to arrest, and indefinitely detain, even US citizens merely accused (but never proven) of involvement in terror-related crimes. Americans who care about liberty and freedom must take immediate action.
Whether concerned about communities vulnerable to racial profiling in the war on terror, or the ideological profiling apparent in the FBI’s investigation of dozens of peace & justice activists around the country, or simply preserving the right to trial or the longstanding prohibition on domestic military deployment, all Americans share a stake in this struggle.

Why are the NDAA’s detention provisions so bad?

  1. The indefinite military detention of US citizens violates the Fifth and the Sixth Amendments, as well as the fundamental Posse Comitatus Act, on which democracy relies. A society is not free when its citizens are subject to arbitrary detention.
  2. The NDAA’s detention provisions would authorize the indefinite military detention of activists. The FBI has long treated peace, environmental, and anti-tax activists as terrorists. Legalizing indefinite detention for anyone accused of a terror-related crime would give any future federal government the unchecked power to silence critics, deny the right to trial, and override the presumption of innocence.
  3. Transforming America into a police state would do the work of our nation’s enemies.Throwing our rights and liberties to the wind is what terrorists want.
  4. The NDAA’s detention provisions would undermine national security. The FBI director, the secretary of defense, the director of national intelligence, President Obama, and the chairs of the Senate Intelligence and Judiciary Committees all recognize that expanded military detention harms national security. They understand that detention would not only threaten constitutional rights but also force the military to perform a mission for which it is ill suited, and erode trust in our justice system.
  5. Congress is supposed to check and balance the Executive Branch, not expand it. The NDAA would give the Obama administration unprecedented power to detain US citizens without judicial review. Rather than checking and balancing the Executive Branch, Congress passed a bill giving the Executive Branch even more power than the administration wants.

5 Reasons NDAA's Detetion Provisions should Scare You:

1- The indefinite military detention of US citizens violates the Fifth and the Sixth Amendments, as well as the fundamental Posse Comitatus Act.
2- The NDAA’s detention provisions would authorize the indefinite military detention of activists.
3- Transforming America into a police state would do the work of our nation’s enemies.
4- The NDAA’s detention provisions would undermine national security.
5- Congress is supposed to check and balance the Executive Branch, not expand it.

Monday, November 7, 2011

VMPac 2011 Elections Endorsements


November 2011 Elections Endorsements / Recommendations*
* The candidates listed below are being jointly supported by the following organisations:
Type of Support
Name of Candidate
ElectrolDistrict
Counties
Type of Election
Position
Endorsed
David Ramadan
87th
Loudoun
State
Delegate
Endorsed
Tom Rust
86th
Loudoun
State
Delegate
Endorsed
Tag Greason
32nd
Loudoun
State
Delegate
Endorsed
Randy Minchew
10th
Loudoun
State
Delegate
Endorsed
Joe May
33rd
Loudoun
State
Delegate
Endorsed
Mark Herring
33rd
Loudoun
State
Senator
Recommended
Jill Vogel
27th
Loudoun
State
Senator
Endorsed
Shawn Mitchell
13th
Loudoun
State
Senator
Endorsed
Steve Simpson 

Loudoun
County
Sheriff
Endorsed
John Stevens

Loudoun
County
Chairman School Board
Endorsed
Andrea McGimsey
Broad Run
Loudoun
County
Supervisor
Endorsed
Kelly Burke
Leesburg
Loudoun
County
Supervisor
Endorsed
Matt LeTourneau
Dulles
Loudoun
County
Supervisor
Recommended
Ralph Buono

Loudoun
County
Supervisor
Recommended
Larry Roeder

Loudoun
County
Supervisor
Neutral
Eugene DelGaudio
Sterling Park
Loudoun
County
Supervisor
Neutral
Ali Shahriari

Loudoun
County
Supervisor
Neutral
Ralph Nevarres

Loudoun
County
Supervisor
Endorsed
Scott York

Loudoun
County
Supervisor
Endorsed
Mark Keam

Fairfax
State
Delegate
Endorsed
Ken Plum

Fairfax
State
Delegate
Neutral
Barbara Comstock

Fairfax
State
Delegate
Neutral
Pamela Danner

Fairfax
State
Delegate
Endorsed
Janet Howell
32nd
Fairfax
State
Senator
Endorsed
Richard Saslaw

Fairfax
State
Senator
Neutral
Caren Merrick

Fairfax
State
Senator
Neutral
Barbara Favola

Fairfax
State
Senator
Endorsed
John Foust

Fairfax
County
Supervisor
Endorsed
Sharon Bulova

Fairfax
County
Chairman
Endorsed
Cathy Hudgins

Fairfax
County
Supervisor
Endorsed
Babur Lateef

Prince Williams
County
Chairman
Endorsed
Marty Nohe
Coles
Prince Williams
County
Supervisor
Endorsed
Michael Christopher May 
Occoquan
Prince Williams
County
Supervisor
Endorsed
Frank Principi  
Woodbridge
Prince Williams
County
Supervisor
Endorsed
George Barker
39th
Prince Williams
State
Senator
Endorsed
Esteban Garces
2nd
Prince Williams
State
Delegate
Endorsed
Milton Christopher John

Prince Williams
County
Chairman School Board  
Endorsed
Richard Anderson 
51st
Prince Williams
State
Delegate
Endorsed
Luke E Torian
52nd
Prince Williams
State
Delegate
Endorsed
Lillian D. Garland 
Coles
Prince Williams
County
School Board