A California assemblywoman is refusing to back down after
fellow lawmakers and the Council for American Islamic Relations, or CAIR, have
demanded she apologize for what they’re calling a “hateful” message she posted
on Twitter.
On Feb. 10, after confirmation that American humanitarian
aid worker Kayla Mueller was killed by the Islamic State, Republican
Assemblywoman Melissa Melendez of Lake Elsinore sent out a tweet calling the
murder “gut wrenching”
Her use of the hashtag “#standupagainstIslam,” however, has
some people up in arms.
Basim Elkarra, executive director of CAIR in Sacramento,
characterized the hashtag as “hateful” and called on Melendez to apologize.
“It’s one thing to stand against terrorists,” he told the
Sacramento Bee, “but to stand against Islam, the faith of 1.6 billion people worldwide,
is another.”
CAIR representative Haroon Manjlai used almost the same
talking points in an interview with KABC-TV in Los Angeles: “Hate rhetoric such
as this can and does lead to hate crimes and dehumanizes a whole population,
and we feel it’s extremely insensitive to say something like this about the
faith of 1.6 billion people.”
A jaw-dropping expose on the six-month undercover operation
that revealed the true terror-supporting nature of CAIR: “Muslim Mafia: Inside
the Secret Underworld That’s Conspiring to Islamize America.”
Melendez, a U.S. Navy veteran, however, has so far refused
to apologize.
“It was never my intention to offend peaceful Muslims,” she
said in a statement released Feb. 12. “However, I’ve had enough of Islamic
extremists and terrorists who oppress women and burn people alive in the modern
world. This isn’t about hashtags; it’s about America standing up with our
allies and putting an end to the barbaric behavior we are witnessing around the
world.”
Sarah Moussa, chair of the California Democratic Party’s
Arab-American Caucus, issued a statement of her own on the 12th, asking for
Melendez to apologize: “Assemblymember Melissa Melendez’s recent social media
comments in response to the murder of Kayla Mueller were profoundly misguided
and deeply offensive to people of Islamic faith. In addition, we would like to
point out to the Assemblymember that comments painting all members of a single
faith with a broad brush have far-reaching consequences that reverberate not
only throughout the state, but throughout our nation. The same day that the
Assemblywoman posted her offensive tweet, three young, innocent Muslim students
were murdered in North Carolina.”
“For those who are trying to make a political issue out of
this, that’s very disappointing,” Melendez responded in an interview with KABC.
“I don’t regret sending [the tweet],” Melendez told the
station. “Maybe we could have used a different hashtag. We may have been able
to do that. But when you read the tweet, it’s about Kayla.”
“I feel bad if any of our Muslim community who with me
condemns ISIS and the Taliban and al-Qaida,” she continued, “I feel bad that
they may have thought I was including them, because I certainly was not.”
She further told KCAL-TV, Los Angeles, “I served in the
Navy, my husband served in the Navy, and we have 34 years of service between
us. We spent 34 years defending religious freedom, so anyone who knows me knows
I would never condemn someone based on their religion.”
Credit to Drew Zahn
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