Spain has begun deportation proceedings against Imran Firasat, a
Christian refugee from Pakistan, for making a documentary about Mohammed
and thereby threatening the national security of Spain. If Firasat is
deported back to Pakistan, he will face the death penalty proving that
it's a short step from the Spanish Inquisition to the Pakistani
Inquisition.
The United States has a man sitting in prison for making another
blasphemous movie, which the government spent weeks blaming for
worldwide attacks on American embassies. And he isn't the first man
persecuted or prosecuted for offending Islam. Offending Islam has become
a national security issue involving all levels of government.
When Bubba the Love Sponge, a Tampa DJ, proposed to burn a Koran, the
commander of the Afghanistan war contacted his girlfriend, who would
later be stalked by Petraeus' girlfriend, to contact the Mayor of Tampa
to keep Bubba from burning a Koran. Instead of explaining how the
American system works to the Lebanese temptress and her four-star
general, the mayor wrote back that the city was working on it.
That month 50 percent more Americans were killed in Afghanistan in the
long slow death march of the war, but a Koran was not burned in Tampa.
Mission accomplished.
Muslims did not have to kill a great number of Americans to enforce
blasphemy law in this country. Counting the various reactions to burnt
Korans, rumors of a flushed Koran and assorted things of that nature,
the number is still well below a hundred. Even counting every casualty
in the war from September 11 onward, it took fewer deaths to make the
United States give up on the Bill of Rights than it took to liberate it
in the War of Independence.
More
