Tag Archives: islam

Around the Tubes

Did you hear fireworks last night?  That would be GP Radio with guest Ron Marz.  It’s well worth the listen.  I’ll give you some time, it’s well worth it.  Now, that you’re back, here’s the other news you might have missed.

Around the Blogs:

Bleeding Cool – The Batman Of New ZealandI wonder what would happen if I did this?

Bloomberg – Islam-Inspired Comic Superheroes, Lauded by Obama, Head to N.Y. Film FestWhere’s the protest and outrage!?

Kotaku – Sunday Comics: A White Belt in Yoga – Kotaku each week brings some great web comics.

Around the Tubes Reviews:

CBR – Greg reviews every single new DC comic!

Teaching Tolerance Through Comics in Indonesia

A series of comics is being released in Indonesia to promote diversity and tolerance in hopes to combat messages of intolerance from Muslim extremist groups.  A newly released comic profiles the true story of Nasir Abas who became disenchanted with the Islamic radical movement.  The al-Qaida-linked militant is doing it through a 137 page graphic novel, Kutemukan Makna JihadAbas fought in Afghanistan against the Soviet invasion and later became the leader of Jemaah Islamiyah.  Abas had a change of heart when the group began to target civilians including the 2002 Bali bombing that killed more than 200 people.  Though he wasn’t directly involved, some people he trained were.

Abas now advocates for religious tolerance and works with authorities to rehabilitate Islamic radicals.  In an interview Abas had to this to say:

I am a Muslim. I have my own obligations and one of my obligations is to tell the good deeds and to prohibit the bad deeds.  So I have a responsibility to stop my friends not to do the bad deeds.

But this is only one example of what’s going on.  At the Ash-Shidiqiyah Islamic boarding school outside of Jakarta, teenage students are being introduced to another comic series that focuses on the adventures of students and how they deal with stereotypes and misinformation.

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Talking to the AP Abas said:

I want children to learn from my experience.  I don’t want them to make the same mistakes.

Around the Tubes

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It’s a long weekend, and I hope everyone takes advantage and enjoys the BBQs, beer, nice weather and fireworks.  Now, here’s some articles for you to read to spend some of your extra time this weekend.

Around the Blogs:

CBLDF – CBLDF Applauds Ruling Invalidating Alaska Censorship Law!Been an awesome week for free speech. #winning

Comic Book Critic – Comics in the mid-1980′s and nowOne person’s reflection on their past comic book buying habits.

Illume – Comic Books Draw Up Muslim Super HeroesA pretty decent article with some of the recent history of Muslims and their depictions in comic books.

Con Coverage:

Bleeding Cool – Francis Ford Coppola Returning To Comic-Con After Almost Twenty Years

IGN – ThunderCats SDCC Exclusive Figure Reveal

Bleeding Cool – This Year, Twilight Will Not Ruin San Diego Comic Con

Kotaku – Toys R Us Brings Halo, Marvel Vs Capcom 3 Toys To Comic-Con

Man Charged Over Threats To South Park Creators


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South Park MohammedJesse Curtis Morton, also known as Younus Abdullah Mohammad, was charged with “criminal threats” in Virginia last week.  Morton is the co-founder of a radical Islamic group and the threat was focused towards the creators of the Cartoon South Park over their depiction of Mohammed.  Morton is believed to be in Morocco, where he maintains Islampolicy.com, an English-language website propagating pro al Qaeda views.  That website is a successor to Revolutionmuslim.com.

Morton is the second person charged with this incident.  Zachary Adam Chesser admitted to posting threats and in February was sentenced to 25 years in prison.  Chesser encouraged jihadists to attack the creators as well.

Sadly this is just on instance of cartoonists threatened or attacked by Muslim extremists over the depiction of Mohammed.  CNN has more on this particular incident.  As always, we stand for free speech and condemn the use of threats and intimidation like this.

DC’s Power Girl Introduces New Muslim Character. Right Rages In 3….2….1…

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MTV Geek broke news that DC comics Power Girl #24 sees the introduction of a new character Ahmad, who happens to also be a Muslim American.  The character is forced to use his metahuman abilities for the first time on a crashing plane, I imagine that’ll go over swell with conservatives who raise a stink any time a Muslim is depicted in comic books.  Writer Judd Winick is the one who gets the fun honor of being the target of pissed off bloggers this time.  But in his interview with MTV Geek, he actually seems like he’s handling a Muslim with super powers in an interesting way.

Winick is intelligently playing off the plane scenario.  The character hasn’t wanted to use his powers, but in this scenario he needs to in an attempt to save the plane and those on board.  This of course isn’t interpreted in the best ways.

He’s going to try and save everyone, but he knows it’s going to look like he’s taking the airplane down. And he’s hoping that afterwards he can explain, and everyone will see… And of course, Power Girl and Batman guide the plane down instead of him.

So he looks guilty, which is sort of where that’s where our story takes off, based on someone who suddenly looks like a super-powered terrorist; when he’s just a regular citizen who wanted to be left alone. Who didn’t want anything to do with any of this, and has now been imprisoned in a Guantanamo Bay like prison for about six months.

Winick has taken the interesting narrative choice of depicting the story from Ahmad’s perspective and thinks a good story will trump coming off as a preachy soapbox.  But it’s this answer in his interview that makes me think we’re in for another shitstorm.

He’s just a simple man who wanted to be left alone, and live his life. Things happen around him that make that impossible. So is he a villain? I don’t think so. I don’t think anyone feels more sick about it than him. As people read this story, I think they’ll see he has reasons for doing what he has to do – or thinks he has reasons for doing what he has to do. He doesn’t feel he’s asking too much.

He’s a man with a lot of ability, who really just wants this one thing. He’s asked for nothing, and he’s been persecuted unjustly… And when that one thing is denied him, then he’s gonna fight.

And I see this getting quoted a lot:

Geek: It does seem like the actual villain here is the American government in the issue. Or is it more complicated?

JW: I think it’s more complicated than that. I think this is a massive, massive misunderstanding. So many people are wrong on so many levels. The bottom line that mistakes were made. I don’t agree that the American government is the bad guy. If you’re a terrorist, yeah, we’re the bad guys. [Laughs] That’s where you’re coming from. But it turns out, this guy is not. He’s just being perceived as one. Those in control are not necessarily going about things the wrong way? They just have their suspicions.

Do I think that some people are being wrongly detained? Yeah, that’s been documented. Lots and lots of men and women have been wrongly detained. Those are the ones we hear about. Are there actual bad guys? Yeah, there are actual terrorists who are being justly detained. In this case, it’s an innocent man.

But it’s clear Winick’s goal is to tell a good story, not a perspective:

This is the era we’re living in right now, since 9/11. Arabs around the world, and Muslims, and Arab-Americans, and Muslim-Americans are people who are under a lot of scrutiny, victims of a lot of racism and prejudice. It makes it topical, it makes it something we want to discuss. Every decade, every era has their stories of people who are persecuted, and right now, there are a lot of American citizens who are taking a lot of crap for being born one way, for being born in another country, and that’s hard.

I mean… I’m not stupid. I’m perfectly aware there’s a war going on, and there are thousands of people who would like nothing better than to kill millions of us. I’m aware of that. And that’s not really the side I’m taking… This is a story about one perspective. The other one gets told a lot. This one just seems more interesting to me.

It’s a good interview where you get a good sense of what’s going on in the story teller’s head.  Head over to MTV Geek and read the full interview.

Mr. Green, On the Blog, With Some Rambling


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A frequent topic of mine here is the ramblings of right-wing blogger Avi Green.  In a post this past Monday, Green goes on the attack labeling me an “apologist, would-be politician” and a “leftist moonbat.”  This due to my criticisms of Green’s writing which you can read here, here, here, here, here, here and here.

Seeing as he’s a political blogger, it’s only fitting for this site to cover his posts and of course correct him where he’s either factually incorrect, outright delusional or just hypocritical.  He accuses me of becoming “nasty and arrogant” in my writing.  Arrogance is an absolute trait of mine, but “nasty” doesn’t quite portray the snark correctly.  In his normal hyperbolic writing, this is on the level of Daily KOS vs. Pamela Geller, though I’m “less significant” in Green’s mind.  In the end I wonder if I’m so “insignificant” why does Green care what I have to say?

As usual, I must play the level headed one, using fact and reasoning to carefully pick apart his rather lengthy attempt to put me in my place.  So, lets began, shall we?

I’ll overlook the comment about this blog being “boring” (we can’t all have babes of the month now can we Ari?), and just get to Green’s first point, which is my coverage of the right’s issues with Peter David’s recent story in X-Factor concerning a character being Muslim.  I remind Green it’s just a story, in his assertion that Muslims would dislike mutants (seriously, we’re grown adults arguing this?).  He attempts to deflect my argument by changing the subject, a favorite tactic of his:

Taking things quite literally, I see. Just a sign that he really doesn’t want to argue. But all he’s doing is falling back on a classic argument at the same time: it’s all “just stories”. But with ludicrous real life issues thrown in. Sci-fi may be make-believe, but the damage done by al Qaeda is not.

Of course I take the writing “literally” as it’s the basis of Green’s argument.  By saying Muslims would find “any mutant who didn’t practice Islam” as inferior,  he himself takes the situation out of the fantasy world and bases it in reality.  The tool of allegory to teach a lesson or issue through story is lost by doing so.

Again the “Muslim as a terrorist” portrait constantly portrayed on his website is evoked.  I’ll use logic and bring us back to reality.  There are Muslims who are terrorists, just like there are Jews, Catholics, Christians, people of all backgrounds who are.  To paint an entire religion or belief system as evil, due to the actions of a few is narrow minded and to not not do so for all is hypocritical.

Mr. Green then admits the phrase of “moderate Muslims but not moderate Islam” is a phrase someone else has used.  Does this matter?  If anything it shows the lack of citation that peppers Green’s posts.  It doesn’t matter who said it originally, just that he’s using it.  Are all Irish Catholics bad because of the IRA?  I can understand the idea of just a subset of people are “evil” is a difficult topic and it’s hard to not paint everyone who shares traits with that subset as “evil” too.  But by not doing so Green is a hypocrite. But don’t worry, others have issues with this as well, it’s a tough line to walk one Congressman Peter King has trouble with.

Green then focuses on women’s roles through religious doctrine:

In Judeo-Christianity, it is considered abominable to molest a woman. However, if young Mr. Schenker were to consider what the Koran’s Sura 2:223 tells:

“Your women are your fields, so go into your fields whichever way you like”

And also what Meredith Jessup relates happened to her in Egypt, maybe he’d be able to understand that Islam completely condones molesting women, and burka/chador or not, even then a woman isn’t safe in many Islamic countries. Unfortunately, we can’t expect someone who worked for a loon like Kerry to be rash.

Yeah, I’m the mean spirited while jabs like “loon” are thrown around.  But, lets actually dive into this, because in recent news we even see how other religions treat women as second class citizens.  It was yesterday that a Hasidic newspaper had to post a statement as to why two women were Photoshopped out of a photo of President Obama and his staff watching the raid on Osama bin Laden.  But it’s this statement I find the most interesting:

In Judeo-Christianity, it is considered abominable to molest a woman

That’s Judeo-Christianity with Western morals added in, not what the Bible or Torah actually says.  As Green enjoys quoting scripture, I’ll do my best to back my facts up with examples as well.

Deuteronomy says rape is ok, as long as you pay the father.  From Deuteronomy 22:28-29 NLT:

If a man is caught in the act of raping a young woman who is not engaged, he must pay fifty pieces of silver to her father.  Then he must marry the young woman because he violated her, and he will never be allowed to divorce her.

On slavery, pillaging and rape, Deuteronomy 20:10-14:

As you approach a town to attack it, first offer its people terms for peace.  If they accept your terms and open the gates to you, then all the people inside will serve you in forced labor.  But if they refuse to make peace and prepare to fight, you must attack the town.  When the LORD your God hands it over to you, kill every man in the town.  But you may keep for yourselves all the women, children, livestock, and other plunder.  You may enjoy the spoils of your enemies that the LORD your God has given you.

That it’s ok the murder a rape victim, from Deuteronomy 22:23-24 NAB:

If within the city a man comes upon a maiden who is betrothed, and has relations with her, you shall bring them both out of the gate of the city and there stone them to death: the girl because she did not cry out for help though she was in the city, and the man because he violated his neighbors wife.

Deuteronomy seems to have a lot on the subject.  From Deuteronomy 21:10-14 NAB:

When you go out to war against your enemies and the LORD, your God, delivers them into your hand, so that you take captives, if you see a comely woman among the captives and become so enamored of her that you wish to have her as wife, you may take her home to your house.  But before she may live there, she must shave her head and pare her nails and lay aside her captive’s garb.  After she has mourned her father and mother for a full month, you may have relations with her, and you shall be her husband and she shall be your wife.  However, if later on you lose your liking for her, you shall give her her freedom, if she wishes it; but you shall not sell her or enslave her, since she was married to you under compulsion.

I guess in Judeo-Christianity molestation is bad, but rape is quite ok in God’s eyes (as well as genocide, murder, pillaging and slavery).  Once again I punt it back to Green.  If you condemn one religion for it’s “acceptance” of rape, I sure hope you’d condemn Judaism and Christianity and all others who do so as well.  As I’ve shown above, they seem to have no problems with it.

And interesting how he considers a picture of a pretty model more concerning than an act of violence against a woman. Does this mean that if we put up a whole gallery of pictures of Sports Illustrated models we’ve literally committed a crime? Only to someone as begrudging as he is, apparently.

I have no issues with pictures of women, I’ve looked at a few, but it’s hard to take serious a website that decries the molestation and rape of women, when itself objectifies them.

Green fixates on Mohammed’s marriage of a 6 year old girl of which Mohammed had relations when she was the age of 9.  I don’t disagree with this as fact, nor do I think it’s ok by today’s standards.

Notice how he doesn’t clearly condemn Muhammed or acknowlege his own actions, like he wants to avoid an actual condemnation of Islam’s “prophet” or recognize that Muhammed’s beliefs are what Islam itself was built upon, and from what I can tell, seems to consider Christianity more of a problem.

In my original retort, I again brought up the double standard that this behavior isn’t isolated to Islam and that Catholic Priests abused young men and women.  I pointed out this is is a hypocritical stance (notice a pattern?).  Green ignores this fact, instead attempting to refocus the attention that I somehow think “Christianity” is more of a problem.  If you read that post I point out Green’s hypocrisy, not overlooking what Mohammed did, just pointing out fact (there’s that crazy word again) that there are more men of religion who have committed these acts.  I’m waiting for Green to condemn those acts as I have condemned all of them, no matter the religion.  I don’t pick and choose what disgusts me based on what God one prays to, instead I condemn the act(s) and who committed them.

When it comes to Mohammed and his marriage to Aishah, I thought this paper was an interesting read as to the history concerning it (good and bad) and the historical and cultural context of the time.  Context and cultural norms for different time periods are difficult concepts I guess.

Green then shows his homophobic nature:

He seems oblivious to how, as this study tells, many of the priests who committed the rapes were gay, and apparently is more comfy to damn Christianity as a whole. On homosexuals, on the other hand, it appears he’s taken a PC route.

I’m guessing after the Muslims, the Gays would be next in Green’s world.

But Green admits to the wrongs committed by other Religions:

Of course Christianity’s followers of yore have done some very bad things. The Crusaders didn’t make a difference between Judaism and Islam, and even King David did something very wrong when he sent Bathsheba’s first husband into frontline combat where he’d be likely to get killed, all so he could marry her instead. But he doesn’t consider how following the Spanish Inquisition, Christianity did make an effort to reform, and by the end of the 19th century, most totalitarians were of a fairly secular nature, thanks to Karl Marx. I guess the French Calvinists and Protestants don’t get any credit for their efforts to make improvements, nor does Pope Benedict for his own effort to clear the Jews in Jesus’ death? That’s sad.

Going with that logic, does the good some Muslims have done to write the wrongs committed by others make that all good?  I guess committing the act is ok, as long as you apologize for it after.  So, it comes back to a question again, should all acts, no matter who they are perpetrated by, be condemned?

I also found humor in this:

But he doesn’t consider how following the Spanish Inquisition, Christianity did make an effort to reform, and by the end of the 19th century, most totalitarians were of a fairly secular nature, thanks to Karl Marx.

Karl Marx the commie/socialist is good for something I guess!

I challenged Green to do some good or put together a conservative political comic of his own.  I even offered to promote and chip in some money to fund the comic.  Instead of raging against Muslims, I suggested he use his traffic to raise funds for victims of 9/11 or fight to make sure first responders are cared for.  I point out I see 0 posts on his website concerning the well being of first responders and Green challenges me to back it up.  When I search for “charity” I found 0 posts raising money for the victims of 9/11.  For the word “fundraising” it’s 0, for “money” it’s 0 and “first responders” has some posts where the words are mentioned with 0 actually calling for Congress to care for them.  Again, I lay down the challenge to help the victims of tragedy, not just rage against an entire religion.  One act does some good, the other achieves nothing.

Green might have missed the issue about making sure the funding is there to care for first responders, so here’s a video from the Daily Show, where someone with a platform and audience does some good.  They eventually got the funding.

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Green continues onto the subject of my criticism of his criticism about Sarah Glidden’s The Waiting Room.

Notice something funny about the links he used? They’re from Wikipedia! LOL. Just how does a site anyone can edit prove automatically what he wants to buy? Besides, my problem isn’t the free education, in and of itself, it’s whether it allows free ideas.

I can understand how Green would dislike a website where ideas are exchanged and facts are backed up with citations.  One can look at the bottom of a Wikipedia article at all of those citations and realize it’s all just made up.  A free forum where others can challenge your facts isn’t good enough for Green.  I could of linked directly to the UNESCO fact sheet I cited, but why not link to an entire article that gives the good and bad?  I guess I’ll just stick to quoting Fox like Green does, at least they’re “fair and balanced.”

And where would I get the idea that Green dislikes “free education?”  How about Green’s own words:

…the political cartoon site says the colleges were free, which sounds vaguely similar to the notions some communists/marxists/socialists have of how to do things

But towards the end of the rambling Green gets interesting citing a purchase I made of Brad Meltzer’s Identity Crisis (you are what you read I guess?), another shot at my former boss John Kerry and a really strange attempt to connect himself Dave Medved (as if his family once knowing someone matters).

So what have we learned here? If anything, that Mr. Schenker is a sadly angry and vindictive man on his part, who detests the right no matter how much he may try to deny it. And that’s a shame, but I guess we can’t expect much better from someone who worked for John “you’ll end up in Iraq” Kerry. What a shame, if anything, that I can’t call him my lantzman.

I could go on and on and say “some of my best friends are Republicans or of the right persuasion” but that argument sounds silly.  I absolutely don’t hate the right, in fact on some issues, I’m conservative.  What I detest is hypocrisy, something Green shows off time and time again in his rants.  Whether that hypocrisy is on the left or the right, it doesn’t matter, I’ll point it out and challenge it.  I also am disgusted by blind hatred.  Labeling an entire religion or an entire people for the acts of the few is close minded and has no place in civil society or civil debate.  Again, whether that comes from the right or the left, it doesn’t matter.  Condemn those who commit the act, condemn those who praise the acts, condemn the act itself.  Don’t paint broad strokes due to the acts of so few and absolutely don’t pick and choose what to condemn just based on the God they choose to pray to.

In the end I realize no matter how much fact or logic I use in my writing, I will never change Mr. Green’s mind.  Sometimes you need to let it go and just accept that a “hater’s gonna hate.”

batman haters gonna hate

Right Continues Its Attack on Comics. Setting Their Crosshairs Back on DC and Superman.


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Batman and Robin on MuslimsIt seems the right has kicked up their fascination with comic books.  In recent months we’ve seen attacks on Captain America and Marvel, Batman and DC, the upcoming Thor movie, their general disdain for The 99, and most recently Marvel and writer Peter David‘s X-Factor.  We’ve shown the outright hypocrisy of right-wing blogger Avi Green and his reactionary and hate filled anti-Muslim screeds, and are still waiting for a response.  Green has now returned his sites back to DC comics and an upcoming issue of Superman, but spares no expense for comic blog Comics Alliance, it’s owner AOL or the website’s staff.  The anger is apparent and attacks at time bizarre.

In a post titled “Islamopandering turns up in Superman” on his website Astute Bloggers, Green shows his feathers being ruffled by a solicitation that even implies Muslims being present in a comic.  Superman #712 is solicited with the below:

Written by J. MICHAEL STRACZYNSKI and CHRIS ROBERSON
Art by EDDY BARROWS and J.P. MAYER
Cover by JOHN CASSADAY
1:10 Variant cover by GEORGE PÉREZ
Meet Los Angeles’s newest super hero in the latest Chapter of “Grounded”: Sharif! But Sharif discovers that in today’s current cultural climate, some people don’t want his help – they just want him gone. Can Superman aid Sharif and quell a prejudiced public, or are there some problems too big even for the Man of Steel to solve?

Number of times the word Muslim or Islam appears in the solicitation = 0.  And let me stress that word, solicitation, it hasn’t been released and Green hasn’t read one panel from it.  But that doesn’t stop Green from seeing conspiracies everywhere.  It also sheds a light that it doesn’t matter how a story is presented, even the idea of a Muslim being in them is disgusting to Green.  Green goes on to say:

Though it doesn’t actually say that “Sharif”, the last name of an Egyptian born actor whose first name was Omar, is a Muslim, the name and description unfortunately serve as an uncomfortable clue to what’s ahead.

But facts seem to have gotten in the way for Green.  A simple search on IMDB will show that Omar Sharif was born Michel Demitri Shalhoub and was raised as a Roman Catholic.  At the age of 23 “he converted to Islam to marry Hamama and took the name Omar al-Sharif.”  Sharif also had a pretty interesting view on religion.  In an interview with The Daily News Egypt Sharif is quoted as saying:

When one sees what happens in the world between the religions, the different religions – killing each other and murdering each, it’s disgusting and as far as I am concerned it’s ridiculous. So I thought I might be useful, I believe in God and I believe in religion, but believe religions should belong to you. The extraordinary thing is that the Jews believe that only the Jews can go to paradise, the Christians believe that only a Christian can go to paradise and the Muslims believe that only the Muslims can go to paradise. Now why should God, in his great justice, make somebody born that cannot go to paradise – it is absurd. Please forgive me I don’t mean to say it’s absurd, people made it absurd.

Wow, it sure sounds like he’s part of a conspiracy to subjugate or murder all non-Muslims.  These small pertinent facts took me all of 5 minutes of research to do, which Green either refused to do or ignored because it doesn’t fit into Green’s twisted view of the world.

The next part of Green’s post focuses on writer J. Michael Stracynski calling him an:

“overrated writer who’s dealt in TV, films, and comics too. He may have once been decent enough, but as the 2000s came in, he started on a cascade downhill, and yes, his left-wing political opinions seeped into his work too. This is one of those type of things.”

I might not be the biggest Straczynski fan, but his Rising Stars was a solid comic book series.  But from there Green’s rage is directed solely at Comics Alliance itself.

After looking through some more of Comics Alliance, including, but not limited to, posts like the above, I’ll be quite honest here, but I don’t think they could write their way out of the proverbial wet paper bag. This is one of the most knee-jerk, politically correct websites I’ve ever seen, and just one sample of how lowbrow AOL really is as a whole.

The problem is Green can’t make up his mind in his attacks.  In the beginning he describes Comics Alliance as a site “leftist-slanted site,” but as you can see above it’s “politically correct.”  To be truly “politically correct,” you really can’t lean left or right as you write or talk as to “not offend anybody.”  So as a “leftist” website, Comics Alliance would then be offending the right, so thus can’t also be “politically correct.”  But, as I’ve shown above with Sharif, why let logic get in one’s way.

Green also has pointed out Comics Alliance covered Everybody Draw Mohammed Day as we as Molly Norris “vanishing because she was scared of death threats.”  Green chalks that up to “irony” since they also covered the above comic book solicitation and showed their leftist leanings.  Sorry to break it to you Mr. Green, that’s not irony, that’s called good reporting.  Much like we here cover comics that touch on this subject, we also cover threats and arrests by Muslims towards cartoonists.  That’s called good reporting and journalism.  There might be some opinion sprinkled in, but that shows both this site and Comics Alliance don’t have an outright agenda, we have opinions that at times are shown when we report news.

Green concludes with this:

No wonder the art form is being destroyed, because people like these will sugarcoat the industry’s steps no matter what. But will they ever suggest a graphic novel be published based on the life of brave people like Debra Burlingame? I doubt they will, and similarly, I doubt they’d even promote a book like that.

No, I’d say the “art form” is being destroyed (if it is at all, I don’t believe it is personally) due to small minded bigots like yourself attacking it and causing those who don’t even bother to purchase or read comics to follow suit.  You’re stifling free speech.  Anything you disagree with, you shout down with attacks, instead of disagreeing with it, showing “facts” (I know you dislike those already) and making a logical argument.  I’d absolutely support a graphic novel based on the life of Debra Burlingame.  I gave a good review for “right wing” comic book The Infidel.  I’m about to read the recent graphic novel adaptation of a Ayn Rand book.

What disgusts me in the end is Green’s consistent attacks on free speech.  Here’s a better idea.  Instead of writing posts about posts about how there’s no other views out there, and the comic book industry is one giant liberal conspiracy, you do something about it.  Write your own comic book or graphic novel.  Get an artist to draw it for you and self-publish it.  I’ll be first in line to cover it, promote it and review it.

I Respond to Avi Green About Islam and Extremism


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So Avi Green at Astute Bloggers in his post about the latest issue of Marvel’s X-Factor had this to say about me directly:

Brett Schenker, the blogmaster of Graphic Policy, is another disgrace and shame of an apologist for this propaganda that trivializes the seriousness of the subject. I wonder if he also sees nothing wrong with Muhammed’s marriage to an underaged girl or the violation of Lara Logan? Update 2: speaking of which, Israel Matzav has word of another case in Libya similar to that of Logan’s (via The Jawa Report).

First Avi, thanks for the link, appreciate the traffic.  And now my response.  I absolutely don’t trivialize the seriousness of the subject.  The threat from extremists is real and I take it very seriously.  But those extremists come from all kinds of religions and backgrounds, they aren’t limited to one.  What I don’t take serious is close minded hate mongers who would rather focus their rage against an entire religion, instead of the extremists amongst them.  How about taking that rage and focus it on politicians who fought against giving the brave men and women, those first responders, the medical care they deserve?  I see 0 posts on that subject when searching your site.

But again lets take his other points, dissect them, and point out Green’s blind hypocrisy.

I wonder if he also sees nothing wrong with Muhammed’s marriage to an underaged girl or the violation of Lara Logan?

Marrying underage women is absolutely wrong and so is assault of any type.  That’s why I’ve also condemned Catholicism for it’s rape and molestation of young boys and girls, and it’s subsequent cover up.  Also, we can pretty much set aside all of Christianity if we’re looking at assaults.  The rise of Evangelical Christianity in Africa has caused an increase in attacks on homosexuals including arrests, torture and murder.  Websites with supposed homosexuals allows extremists to easily track them down and dispense “justice.”

I don’t condemn an entire religion due to the actions of a few, as shown above, we’d have to write off a lot more than just Islam.  This great site has a list of the various atrocities Christian extremists committed over the years:

As soon as Christianity became legal in the Roman Empire by imperial edict (315), more and more pagan temples were destroyed by Christian mob. Pagan priests were killed.

Between 315 and 6th century thousands of pagan believers were slain.

Christian Emperor Theodosius (408-450) even had children executed, because they had been playing with remains of pagan statues.
According to Christian chroniclers he “followed meticulously all Christian teachings…”

In 6th century pagans were declared void of all rights.

Emperor Karl (Charlemagne) in 782 had 4500 Saxons, unwilling to convert to Christianity, beheaded.

After the war ended (1229) the Inquisition was founded 1232 to search and destroy surviving/hiding heretics. Last Cathars burned at the stake 1324.

Estimated one million victims (Cathar heresy alone),

Other heresies: Waldensians, Paulikians, Runcarians, Josephites, and many others. Most of these sects exterminated, (I believe some Waldensians live today, yet they had to endure 600 years of persecution) I estimate at least hundred thousand victims (including the Spanish inquisition but excluding victims in the New World).

Spanish Inquisitor Torquemada, a former Dominican friar, allegedly was responsible for 10,220 burnings.

The “island’s population of about eight million people at the time of Columbus’s arrival in 1492 already had declined by a third to a half before the year 1496 was out.” Eventually all the island’s natives were exterminated, so the Spaniards were “forced” to import slaves from other caribbean islands, who soon suffered the same fate. Thus “the Caribbean’s millions of native people [were] thereby effectively liquidated in barely a quarter of a century”. “In less than the normal lifetime of a single human being, an entire culture of millions of people, thousands of years resident in their homeland, had been exterminated.”

A total of maybe more than 150 million Indians (of both Americas) were destroyed in the period of 1500 to 1900, as an average two thirds by smallpox and other epidemics, that leaves some 50 million killed directly by violence, bad treatment and slavery.

In many countries, such as Brazil, and Guatemala, this continues even today.

Not to mention hate crimes, rapes and murders today that are committed by followers of “Christianity.”  Every religion, country, peoples have committed atrocities, many continue to do so.  If Green doesn’t want to be a hypocrite, how about he joins my call and condemn it all?
Update: As pointed out by a few that this post might come off as anti-Christian, in reality that was the easiest of information I could dig up online and think.  Here’s 8 more crimes committed in the name of religion.  People of all religions have done horrible things, and you can’t condemn an entire belief system due to the actions of a few.

Shocker, The Right Has An Issue With X-Factor


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X-Factor #217 CoverConservative blogger Avi Green of course has issues with the latest issue of Marvel‘s X-Factor setting his sites on the latest issue of the series, blogger Andrew Belonsky of Death & Taxes as well as myself and this blog.  In fact I was called:

…another disgrace and shame of an apologist for this propaganda that trivializes the seriousness of the subject

The issue features the announcement that mutant Monet is an Algerian Muslim after she confronts a crowd of “Anti-Muslim protesters” in New York City.  The crowd is similar to anti-mosque protests that actually occurred in New York City.  As usual, we’ll break down Green’s arguments.

Did it ever occur to them how the Koran might look upon mutants, if they existed in real life? The Religion of Peace certainly considers non-Muslims inferior, and also women, as indicated in Sura 2:228, and any mutant who didn’t practice Islam would be decreed as such too.

Well, Green right there contradicts himself.  He talks about how Muslims would hate mutants, and then says they’d only hate non-Muslim mutants.  We rebut, it’s MAKE BELIEVE!  Mutants don’t exist, it’s a story.

What’s absurd here is how it depicts a girl with cleavage, something forbidden in the most extreme Islamic regimes like Saudi Arabia, identifying herself as a Muslim (she’s said to be of Algerian background not unlike Batman Inc’s Nightrunner), shades of corrupt NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg’s own knee-jerk blather. Though there are some Muslim women who don’t dress in burqas/niqabs, the deeper you go into the Islamic world, the more oppressive it is to the point where the death sentence can be given to those who don’t wear them.

Well, at least Green realizes not all Muslims wear burqas.  But, why not paint an entire religion and belief based off some of it’s member’s beliefs.  Judaism doesn’t force men and women to sit separately, and observant Jews refuse to touch women (you never know when they’re on their period).  Christian religions don’t subjugate women, refusing them roles of leadership or forcing their own dress standards.  Those things don’t happen at all, cause if you did, you’d have to condemn those religions and followers as well.  And I absolutely want to take commentary about women’s rights from a blog that runs an “Infidel Babe of the Week.”

Thus, the irony is that not every Muslim male around the world, not even in the west, is going to be impressed with that scene in X-Factor 217. They could’ve made this a scene depicting a gay/lesbian identifying with the ummah, and given that many Muslims are violently hostile to gays and lesbians, you can be sure not every Muslim would be impressed with a scene like that either. There may be moderate Muslims, but there is no moderate Islam.

What does this even mean?  If you have moderate followers of a religion, by definition you have a moderate version of that religion.

That aside, Marvel has really gone beyond the pale this time. It’s bad enough if they took blame-America standings with Captain America in past years. Now they’re even going so far as to desecrate the victims of 9-11 and offend those closest to them by implying it is democratic Americans opposed to violent ideologies, shariah, and also a building project that desecrates the memory of their loved ones who are the problem, not the jihadists themselves, and they refuse to distinguish between religion and race. Their current product is an offense to a lot of people I respect like Debra Burlingame and 9-11 Families for a Safe & Strong America, Pamela Geller, Robert Spencer, Brigitte Gabriel and Steve Emerson.

Or, a company that often mines real world events for material, has done so again.  Since Marvel produced numerous materials to raise money for the response workers and victim’s family members (as did many comic book companies), I think I’ll give them a pass.  How much has Green done to help victim’s or families beyond the ramblings on his blogs (I use multiple as he’s really good at cross posting).

And who wrote the X-Factor story here? Peter David, I’m afraid. The man who once wrote a story in the same named series back in the early 90s where they and the Hulk took down a Saddam Hussein-ish dictator now does 360, and explains why I don’t think I’ll want to read his writings anymore. Once, I thought he was smart enough to avoid this kind of propaganda, and he did once signal he respects Israel. Guess I was wrong. Now, he’s plumbing new depths and suggesting he condones imposing sharia on America.

1) Saddam wasn’t exactly an Islamicist, I know the right hasn’t accepted that fact, 2) How do you go from depicting “Ground Zero” protesters to “condones imposing sharia on America”?  Over react much?

Wait for Part II in an hour.

X-Factor Gets It’s Own Algerian Muslim


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X-Factor #217 CoverAs if taunting right wing over-reactors, writer Peter David highlighted character Monet is a Muslim of Algerian descent.  In Marvel‘s X-Factor, New York City Mayor J. Jonah Jameson and members of X-Factor including Monet, Guido and Siryn deal with protesters who resemble last year’s “Ground Zero” protests.

David dares the venomous internet hate to be turned his way, by depicting the crowd as all white.  Their statements include these gems:

America for Americans.

We need to protect our borders.

We don’t need more Muslim terrorists getting in here.

Yeah!  They’re as bad as mutants!

X-Factor #217

That’s just some of the quotes in one panel alone.  Didn’t Marvel learn their lesson with depicting the Tea Party and white people?  To those hate tinged statements, mutant Monet responds with a bold declaration:

Oh, really? I’m a Muslim and a mutant…

And in a simple few pages the allegory of mutant plight shifted to speak for current tensions with Muslims here in America.  The “X” line of comics has traditionally been a great narrative of civil right and racial issues in the United States.

From it’s earliest days, it could easily be pigeonholed into being nothing more but a comic book version of the civil rights struggles that were being fought when the X-men first debuted in 1963.  With factions representing Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr it was easy to see there was more to this comic book series.  In the 80’s the focus turned to gay rights, with some mutants revealing they were gay and in one story line AIDS was discussed as a plague ravaged that community.

But today, David has shifted the focus to modern hate, that of Muslims.  He lays it right out there with these two statements by protesters:

All mutants want to take over the world.

and

And Muslims, too. It’s right in your sacred texts. You guys are at war with Christianity. And your mosques are really secret terrorist training camps.

Monet doesn’t respond with the best rebutal, that comes from white Mayor J. Jonah Jameson (the same guy who used to torture Spider-Man and run the Daily Bugle):

Funny thing: I keep hearing that from the far ends of the both sides: ‘We want our country back.’ Where’d it go? If neither side has it, then who took it? Guess what? I did.

Me and my big white ancestors. We came rolling in and took it from the people who were here in the first place. And right after we did that, we kidnapped people from Africa to help us build it. And now we’re all worried that karma’s coming back to bite us on the keister. So we got to fight back because otherwise a hundred years from now, we might be the ones living in reservations and dying a small pox.

We can do that. Keep everyone we’re afraid of out. Send intruders back where they came from, or maybe put ‘em in camps like World War II, ’cause we’re afraid they’re terrorists. Or maybe… And it’s a crazy idea, I know… Maybe we can stop treating everybody like they’re the damned enemy.

And there we have it, Peter David has a clear message for the white haters who have raged before.  As Andrew Belonsky at Death and Taxes points out:

Writer Peter David’s message starts to become clear: bigotry, real or imagined, toward Muslims or mutants, goes against the American grain, and treating “different” people like the enemy does the nation no favors.

It was an Algerian Muslim who launched the last round of protests from the right when one was made a Batman over at DC Comics.  Peter David seems to continue to dare society with this latest plot twist.  His writing has been very gay friendly, which has lead to honors from GLAAD for his portayal.

But, the question remains, will the right throw a hissy-fit like they did over Batman/Nightrunner?  If they do, they defeat their original claims their issue was with an unrealistic portrayal of Algerians and French.  But, likely this great series will fly under the radar of the hatemongers.

No matter what, David pushes the envelope, and has drawn a line in the sand.  He’s daring the right to respond, and we’ll see if they take up his clear challenge.

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