L'Islamophobie (industrialisée et banalisée) est la première alliée sur le terrain du négationnisme truco-turc industrialisé et exporté par Ankara.
C'est pour cela je signale ici dans la présente discussion, le texte ci-dessous concernant
L'Organisation de la Conférence Islamique . OCI / Islamophobie et Paix à l'ordre du jour ?
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viewtopic.php?t=19301
~ OCI /
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organisat ... _islamique
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https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligue_arabe
The Islamophobia Industry: How the Right Manufactures Fear of Muslims, Nathan Lean', 240 pages, 2012.
En effet, comment l'OCI et la Ligue des États Arabes, peuvent-elles y travailler si (au minimum) elles n'ont pas fait traduire un tel livre en français ?
~ TRADUCTION EN >> FR
-- https://translate.google.fr/?sl=en&tl=fr&op=translate
# (pp. i-vi) . Front Matter
# (pp. vii-vii) . Table of Contents
# (pp. viii-ix) . Acknowledgments
# (pp. x-xiv) . Foreword . John L. Esposito
- Islamophobia did not suddenly come into being after the events of 9/11. Like anti-Semitism and xenophobia, it has long and deep historical roots. Its contemporary resurgence has been triggered by the significant influx of Muslims to the West in the late twentieth century, the Iranian revolution, hijackings, hostage taking, and other acts of terrorism in the 1980s and 1990s, attacks against the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, and subsequent terrorist attacks in Europe.
Most Americans’ first encounter with an unknown Islam occurred with the Iranian Revolution of 1978 and the taking of hostages in the...
# (pp. 1-15) . Introduction
- Ahmed Sharif, a 44-year-old taxi cab driver from Bangladesh knew the ins and outs of Manhattan like he knew his name. It was his job, after all, to deliver clients, most of who were unfamiliar with the daunting passageways of the concrete jungle, to their destination. Fifteen years on the job had brought his way countless street names and neighborhoods that would puzzle even the most experienced public chauffeur. It also brought thousands of casual acquaintances—five-minute friends—that slumped down on the blue leathery cushion of his front seat and chatted about the Mets’ terrible losing streak or cursed...
# (pp. 16-40) . 1/ Monsters Among Us: A History of Sowing Fear in America
- A Kalashnikov assault rifle rested against one of the parched shale rock formations that twisted through the remote mountains of Afghanistan. The brittle, chalky sediment, forming what appeared to be a cave-like structure, provided a contrasting backdrop for the lanky, dark figure that sat cross-legged, staring into the camera. His beard, once shiny and black, was now unkempt and splotched with white. It crept downward into the large camouflage jacket that draped his broad shoulders, shielding him from the biting autumn winds.
Appearances like this were rare. For more than 20 years, he had lurked behind the rough terrain of...
# (pp. 41-65) . 2/ A Web of Deception: Fomenting Hate Online
- Though the firestorm of controversy had not yet engulfed lower Manhattan, Pamela Geller knew that it was looming. After all, it was part of her plan. Just before eleven o’clock in the evening on May 6, 2010, she polished the last lines of a blog entry—one so strident in falsehoods and saturated in anti-Muslim sentiment that it would soon become the propellant for a reckless media frenzy and national uprising. Her piece, unsubtly titled “Monster Mosque Pushes Ahead in Shadow of World Trade Center Islamic Death and Destruction,” was a fuming declaration of disapproval for a proposed Muslim community...
# (pp. 66-77) . 3/ Media Mayhem: Broadcasting Anti-Muslim Madness
- As is the case with any industry, advertising is paramount to the success of a product. One need not look further than the Super Bowl to understand the advertising industry’s sheer obsession with reaching a massive number of people; each year, the highest bidders are offered short slots to disseminate catchy clips of their goods, be they Coca-Cola, Nike shoes, or other high-rolling, multimilliondollar enterprises.
The Islamophobia industry also goes to great lengths to sell its message to the public. The difference, though, is that in many cases the very networks that spread their product are themselves participants in the...
# (pp. 78-118) . 4/ We Come Bearing Crosses: The Christian Right’s Battle for Eternity
- “All these people will die and burn in hell,” thundered Bill Keller, a Florida-based Internet evangelist, railing against supporters of the Park51 Cultural Center. Holding a red leather Bible in one hand, he rocked backed and forth, his arms flailing up and down in sync with the words of his brazen message. “Islam is not and has never been a religion of peace,” he scoffed. “How could you build bridges with people who ask their Muslim brothers to fly a plane into the twin towers and killed thousands of innocent people?”¹
Preaching to a crowd of 50 gathered
# (pp. 119-136) . 5/ Of Politics and Prophecy: The Alliance of the Pro-Israel Right
- The town of Ma’ale Adumim sits on a West Bank hill 7 kilometers east of Jerusalem. Surrounded on four sides by the Judean Desert, it was once a dusty outpost for Israeli Defense Forces but is now, with a population of nearly 40,000, the third-largest settlement in the Occupied Territories. Rows of olive trees line Highway 1, the main junction that connects the holy city to Tel Aviv, spilling out into a myriad of neighborhoods, shopping malls, and businesses.
Despites its modern appearance, the city’s historical roots run deep. From the valleys of the ancient town emerge religious narratives that...
# (pp. 137-155) . 6/ To Washington and Beyond: Islamophobia as Government Policy
- Room 311 in the Cannon House office building is a stately space. Coffered, vaulted ceilings, reminiscent of ancient Greece and Rome, hang high above the dark green Victorian carpet. An occasional chandelier dangles from the highest arcs, casting a warm yellow light against the creamy walls, the upper portions of which are interrupted by several flat-screen television monitors—unsightly but necessary concessions in a battle between maintaining tradition and embracing modernity. Opposite the august mahogany rostrum, adorned with eagles and other symbols of American splendor, the Squadron of Evolution, a fleet of US Navy ships outfitted with fully rigged masts...
# (pp. 156-180) . 7/ Across the Pond: The Deadly Effects of Hate in Europe
- Manifestos are curious documents. As platforms for ideological expression, they offer a glimpse inside the minds of their creators, who unpack for the public in prose-like fashion, the guiding principles and idiosyncrasies that shape their beliefs. Most are political declarations, grandiose visions for society’s betterment spelled out in lofty overtures by political actors who hope to influence the disaffected. Others are more personal, diary-like musings penned by a celebrated few who hope to impart on the world a vestige of the cause they championed. And some are crude blueprints for a world that exists only in the minds of the...
# (pp. 181-184) . Conclusion
- Safaa Fathy, a fifty-something physiotherapist from Murfreesboro, Tennessee had never seen anything like it. But that did not mean that the bout of destructive trauma that beset the Muslim community in her small town, the shiny golden buckle of the Bible Belt, was of a distinctly new origin. Cyclical hate, by its very nature, fed on other similar prejudices. “There is something around the whole United States, something [that] is different,” she said. “I was here since 1982. I have three kids here and I never had any trouble. My kids, they go to the girl scouts, they play basketball,...
# (pp. 185-210) . Notes
# (pp. 211-213) . Bibliography
# (pp. 214-226) . Index
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