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Showing posts with label Muslim President. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Muslim President. Show all posts

Friday, October 23, 2015

Secret Service Protection For Trump And Carson As Well As Added Protection For Hillary

BREAKING: Carson and Trump Get Terrifying News… Secret Service Responds Immediately

Sources have confirmed with Newsmax that 2016 GOP presidential candidates Ben Carson and Donald Trump are slated to receive Secret Service protection due to death threats they have been receiving from lunatic liberals and Islamic radicals.
The threats to Carson have been especially “off the charts” after comments he made a few weeks ago about the idea of America electing a Muslim president. He made it clear that he would not be in support of it.
Plus, according to one source, there is evidence to suggest that domestic home-grown terrorists intend to target at least one political candidate, if not more.
“It is widely believed ISIS would like to strike a major political target in the U.S.,” the source told Newsmax.
Between the two candidates, however, only front-runner Donald Trump — whose public presence has been growing since he announced for office in June — has officially requested a Secret Service protection detail.
“I want to put them on notice because they should have a liability,” Trump said during an interview with The Hill last week. “Personally, I think if Obama were doing as well as me, he would’ve had Secret Service (earlier). I have by far the biggest crowds.”
Both candidates are slated to receive two dozen agents each as early as next week, Newsmax reported. Carson initially resisted the Secret Service’s request to protect him, but once officials shared some of their intelligence with him, he complied.
Democrat front-runner Hillary Clinton is also going to receive more agents, but they’ll simply be an upgrade to her current detail, which she’s had since leaving the White House as first lady in 2001.
Hopefully, all the threats are just that — empty threats. But it’s always better, especially in politics, to be safe than sorry.
H/T Fox New
Do you think the threats to either Carson or Trump will grow even worse if one of them wins the primary? Please share this post on Facebook or Twitter and let us know what you think!

Friday, September 25, 2015

Carson Hits A Home Run With His Statements On A Muslim President

Former Radical Islamist: Yeah, Ben Carson Is Right About Muslims

Leah Barkoukis

9/24/2015 6:30:00 PM - Leah Barkoukis
Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson drew the ire of both Democrats and some Republican presidential candidates after saying on NBC’s “Meet the Press” Sunday that he would “not advocate that we put a Muslim in charge of this nation.” 
Even after the criticism, Carson refused to walk back his comment, although he did offer more clarification.
"Those Republicans that take issue with my position are amazing," he wrote in a Facebook statement. "Under Islamic Law, homosexuals – men and women alike – must be killed. Women must be subservient. And people following other religions must be killed. I know that there are many peaceful Muslims who do not adhere to these beliefs. But until these tenants are fully renounced ... I cannot advocate any Muslim candidate for President."
And to be fair, he told Fox News’ Sean Hannity that he wouldn’t advocate putting a Christian in the office if they wanted to turn the country into a theocracy. “We don't put people at the head of our country whose faith might interfere with them carrying out the duties of the Constitution,” he said.
Not only do a number of Americans agree with his comment—based on the amount of money pouring into his campaign since then—but he’s also received support from Dr. Tawfik Hamid, a former Islamic extremist.
“As a Muslim — and particularly as a former member of a radical Islamist group — I can state unequivocally that Dr. Carson is correct,” Hamid wrote in a column. “Without a single exception, the approved Islamic literature teaches violent principles such as killing apostates, beating women, killing gays, and enslaving female war prisoners for sexual purposes.”
“If anyone doubts this, or wishes to challenge it, they need to prove this to be wrong,” he continued, adding that no Islamic texts exist which reject the “traditional barbaric principles of Islamic law.”
“These Shariah values and principles, which are so hostile to the American Constitution, are still an integral part of mainstream Islam,” he noted.
Thus, Carson is absolutely correct.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Ben Carson Continues To Amaze And Please Us. His Stand On A Muslim President Is SO On Point, So Correct, So Non-PC--We Really Respect His Clear Thinking!

Ben Carson Slams 'PC' Media, Says Muslim Comments Were 'Theoretical'

Image: Ben Carson Slams 'PC' Media, Says Muslim Comments Were 'Theoretical' (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images)
By Sandy Fitzgerald   |   Tuesday, 22 Sep 2015 11:34 AM
GOP presidential candidate Ben Carson slammed the media and pundits who've been critical of him over 'theoretical' comments he made about supporting a hypothetical Muslim president.

"When the situation arises, and we have someone in that situation, we'll talk about it. Why get off into a theoretical situation? There's so many important issues. Why is it people are not interested in the important issues that are going on?" he said during a Tuesday press conference in Ohio. He mentioned the refugee situation in Syria and the problems going on with the American educational system as examples.

Carson doubled down saying any president of any faith has to place the Constitution abover personal religious beliefs.

"They must place it above their personal beliefs," Carson said during an appearance in Sharonville, Ohio. "If you're not willing to do that, you should not be running for president."

But Carson said he does see a way to support a more moderate Muslim for office, complaining that his comments were misunderstood and that  "it seems hard for people to actually hear English and understand it."

"I said I would support anyone regardless of their background, if in fact, they embrace American values and our Constitution, and are willing to place that above their beliefs," Carson told the press conference, held before his scheduled rally.

But he said he could not back Muslims who embrace Sharia law, which is "completely antithetical to Americanism."

Carson told reporters that he knows he has gotten bad press and comments from his initial comments, made on NBC's "Meet the Press" program Sunday, but "the only way we fix that is to fix the PC culture in our country [where people] can listen to one narrative and if it doesn't fit their philosophy, then they have to try to ascribe some motive to make it fit."

The PC culture, said Carson, means that if a question isn't answered in a certain way, "let's attack and let's not try to actually understand what a person is saying."

Carson said he has heard from several Muslim-Americans whom he worked with, trained, or even operated on during his career as a neurosurgeon, and they have told him they understand what he is talking about.

But at the same time, "there is no question that our Constitution, and our traditions, have a Judeo-Christian base," and most Americans believe in those values, "but we never should have a theocracy."

Carson supporters attending the rally said they agree with his comments on a Muslim president, reports The Cincinnati Enquirer.

"And I think it's awesome he's doubled down (on his comments about a Muslim president)," one supporter told the newspaper.

Late Monday night, Carson also retreated slightly from his Sunday comments, telling Fox News that he would be open to a moderate Muslim who denounced radical Islam as a White House candidate. But he also said he stood by his original comments, saying the country cannot elect people "whose faith might interfere with carrying out the duties of the Constitution."

"If you're a Christian and you're running for president and you want to make this into a theocracy, I'm not going to support you," Carson told Fox News host Sean Hannity in an interview to be broadcast later Monday. "I'm not going to advocate you being the president."
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Carson said members of the Islamic faith who are willing to accept the American way of life "will be considered infidels and heretics, but at least then I will be quite willing to support them."

The intensifying political fallout is a distraction at least as the retired neurosurgeon tries to capitalize on recent momentum in the unruly GOP field. But it also highlights a sentiment among voters in both parties who agree with Carson's reluctance to elect a Muslim to the nation's highest office.

Carson's campaign reported strong fundraising and more than 100,000 new Facebook friends in the 24 hours after he told NBC's "Meet the Press" on Sunday: "I would not advocate that we put a Muslim in charge of this nation."

His campaign manager Barry Bennett told The Associated Press on Monday: "While the left wing is huffing and puffing over it, Republican primary voters are with us at least 80-20."

"People in Iowa particularly, are like, 'Yeah! We're not going to vote for a Muslim either,'" Bennett said. "I don't mind the hubbub. It's not hurting us, that's for sure."

The head of the nation's largest Muslim advocacy group called on Carson to drop out of the 2016 presidential contest during a Capitol Hill press conference on Monday, declaring him "unfit to lead because his views are in contradiction with the United States Constitution."

"Not long ago, some people thought that a Catholic cannot be a president, an African-American cannot be a president," said Nihad Awad, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic relations. "They were wrong then, and they are wrong now."

He cited Article 6 in the Constitution, which states, "no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States."

A couple of Republican candidates joined a chorus of Democrats condemning Carson's statement.

South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham said Sunday that the comment "shows that Dr. Carson is not ready to be commander in chief."

Businesswoman Carly Fiorina also denounced rival Carson's recent comments about not wanting a Muslim elected to the White House.

"Well I think that's wrong," said Fiorina. "You know it says in our Constitution that religion cannot be a test for office."

The leading Democratic presidential candidate, Hillary Rodham Clinton, addressed the issue Monday on Twitter: "Can a Muslim be President of the United States of America? In a word: Yes. Now let's move on."

While the law is clear, the politics of Muslim culture in America are not. Fourteen years after Islamic extremists executed the deadliest terrorist attack in U.S. history, a suspicious stance resonates with some voters despite the fact that — as Democratic Sen. Harry Reid put it Monday — "they teach in our schools, fight in our military and serve in Congress."

The U.S. Muslim population is growing, according to a May survey by the Pew Research Center, which found the group represented just under 1 percent of the U.S. population.

A June Gallup poll found that 54 percent of Republicans would not vote for a well-qualified Muslim nominee from their own party; 39 percent of independents and 27 percent of Democrats said the same.

"Carson is not going to lose any votes in a GOP primary with those comments," said GOP strategist John Feehery. "He could probably gain a few."

Indeed, conservatives have repeatedly embraced anti-Muslim sentiment in recent years.

Nineteen states introduced legislation in 2015 to restrict the use of foreign law in state courts, Republican-backed steps largely designed to block the influence of Shariah — the legal framework that regulates many aspects of life based on the Quran and Islamic tradition in some Muslim countries.

Nine states have already implemented such laws, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

And conservatives have consistently tried to link President Barack Obama to Islam throughout his presidency, using imaginary religious ties.

Republican front-runner Donald Trump declined last week to correct a voter who inaccurately stated that Obama is a Muslim. For Trump, the election of a Muslim president was "something that could happen. Would I be comfortable? I don't know if we have to address it right now."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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