ACT! for America > Issues & Legislation

Issues & Legislation

Issues

Following is a partial listing of issues ACT! for America is concerned about.
  • FBI discrimination against Christians and Jews who apply to be Arabic translators.
  • The existence of Islamic paramilitary camps operating on American soil.
  • Radical Muslims posing as "refugees" and gaining entrance to the United States under the Humanitarian Refugee Act.
  • The need for First Amendment protection for journalists who report on militant Islamic activities.
  • Increasing pro-Islamist and anti-American and anti-Israeli bias in high school and college courses and textbooks.
  • The growing number of Madrassas (Islamic schools) proliferating in the United States, schools that frequently teach hatred of Christians, Jews, Americans, and non-Muslims.
  • Anti-American, anti-Christian and anti-Jewish hate speech in mosques in America.
  • Islamic radicals posing as Hispanic immigrants to enter the United States across our southern border.
  • Islamic radicals teaming up with illegal immigrant gangs in illicit activities, such as drug smuggling, to provide funding for terrorist organizations.
  • Iran's nuclear weapons program.
  • Islamic charities that serve as conduits for funding of Islamic terrorist organizations.
  • The existence of terrorist sleeper cells in the U.S.
  • The need to reduce American dependence on Middle Eastern oil.
  • Defeating al-Qaeda in Iraq.
  • Purveyors of political correctnesss: How the political Left in America denies, apologizes for, or blames America for the rise in Islamic extremism and terrorism.

Legislation

The "John Doe" Bill With the help of our members, earlier in 2007 Congress passed the "John Doe" bill, introduced by New Mexico Congressman Steve Pearce, which provides protection from lawsuits for individuals who report what they reasonably suspect is potential terrorist activity. The catalyst for the bill was a lawsuit filed by the so-called "flying Imams," a group of Islamic clerics who were removed from a US Airways flight in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Imams engaged in suspicious behavior, including changing seats on the flight, asking for seat belt extenders when they didn't need them, and making loud threats against America. The Imams subsequently filed a lawsuit that included unnamed "John Doe's," the people who reported the suspicious behavior. This lawsuit illustrates a growing trend by Muslims and Muslim organizations to use legal action to intimidate people from speaking out against Islamic extremism.

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Multimedia

News

Gerry Connolly: Candidate in Virginia US House seat race questioned on source of contribution by CAIR leader
According to Lafferty, Connolly sees Muslims as a major voting bloc in northern Virginia. "Here where we live in northern Virginia, it's called the 'Wahabbi corridor,' and there is a growing number of radical Islam organizations here. [T]he Muslim community in general is growing, and he's pandering to the most violent people among the Muslims who live here. I don't believe all the Muslims who live here are as extreme as the people that Mr. Connolly works with, but I guess he thinks they are," Lafferty explains. He believes Connolly "needs to come clean and scrub his campaign of all terrorist influence and sympathizers." Lafferty says Connolly also needs to be asked whether the contribution from the CAIR founder affected his "vigilance" in protecting the people of Fairfax County from the "cell of terrorists operating within it." read more

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