The TLC series, All-American Muslim, has been canceled after one season amid controversy and sagging ratings. Good. The premise was ridiculous. It's not that the show was about Muslims. Who cares? The fact is that the show specifically situated itself as a response to "Islamophobia" -- this was clear from the opening moments of the first show and the headlines about islamophobia, the Ground Zero mosque, etc. It was severely misleading, because it didn't deal with the kind of Muslims who would ever have caused anyone any concern in the first place. And I had been saying that since the show premiered.
The media was on a jihad to prop this show up. On the Olbermann show, hate was spewed: "Pam Geller [sic] to be really, really, truly terrifying. I think the stuff she does is dangerous."
Anderson Cooper, media snake, attacked the show's critics. Check out my appearance on the Dr. Drew show defending Americans who were being smeared by this show.
Lowe's and Kayak (among others) pulled their ads from the show, despite vicious attacks by the sharia-compliant media. Every company is free to choose where they put their ad dollars, and 64 companies pulled their ads. And rightly so. The show was predicated on a lie and the relentless propaganda of Islamic supremacists.
On page 75 of my book, Stop the Islamization of America: A Practical Guide to the Resistance, I explain the sinister orgins of the thought-crushing device, "Islamophobia":
The very word “Islamophobia” is a fictional construct, as journalist Claire Berlinski explains, “The neologism ‘Islamophobia’ did not simply emerge ex nihilo. It was invented, deliberately, by a Muslim Brotherhood front organization, the International Institute for Islamic Thought, which is based in Northern Virginia….Abdur-Rahman Muhammad, a former member of the IIIT who has renounced the group in disgust, was an eyewitness to the creation of the word. ‘This loathsome term,’ he writes, ‘is nothing more than a thought-terminating cliche conceived in the bowels of Muslim think tanks for the purpose of beating down critics.’”85
Discover the Networks reports, "Although the term was coined in the early 1990s, 'Islamophobia' did not become the focus of an active Brotherhood campaign until after 9/11."
Oh, and remember the docile imam in the ridiculous TLC TV show, All-American Muslim? The benign, sweet imam who oversaw the conversion of that sad Roman Catholic young man to Islam so that he could marry his Muslim girlfriend? Well, here's a side of the imam you may have missed. This is the moderate everyone is counting on. lml.
Sheikh Husham Al-Husainy, who appeared on All-American Muslim, recently debated the author of The Deception of Allah, Christian Prince, and revealed his hatred of Jews and Israel. He said that soon Muslims will destroy Israel. Thus the All-American Muslim imam again shows his true colors. Remember, he melted down on Hannity in 2007 after praying an Islamic prayer cursing Jews and Christians at a Democratic National Committee meeting.
Al-Husainy shows his real face in this video. He supports terrorism -- and this is the moderate 'happy face' that TLC had on its show, exemplifying a moderate imam. Imam Husham Al Husainy: soon the Islamic Army will attack Israel.
UPDATE Soros funded fascists are stomping in their jackboots. Think Progess whines:
The show was also the subject of a campaign by prominent Islamaphobes. Pamela Geller insisted that the show was offensive because it refused to portray Muslims as extremists, terrorists, and criminals. The Florida Family Association, essentially a one-man front group with a history of running boycotts rather than advancing family values, convinced hardware giant Lowe’s and travel discounter Kayak to drop their advertising on the show. Lowe’s tried to hide behind claims of negative buzz for the show on social media, though there was little evidence of any such chatter that wasn’t inflected by anti-Muslim sentiment, and Kayak’s founder wrote an incoherent attack on the show in response to criticism. Both companies were subject to intense pressure to reinstate their advertising, and music executive Russell Simmons offered to buy up spots on the show, only to find that they were sold out.




